Here’s a common wiring diagram for using a Type B earth leakage relay to monitor a three-phase VFD line.
Wiring Explanation:
Main Power: The three-phase (R, S, T) or three-phase four-wire (R, S, T, N) power supply connects here.
Circuit Breaker (MCCB/MCB): Installed on the supply side, this provides overload and short-circuit protection for the VFD.
It must have a shunt trip coil (or undervoltage release, depending on the relay’s output) to receive the trip signal from the leakage current protection relay. When the shunt trip coil is energized, the breaker trips immediately.
Zero Sequence Current Transformer (ZCT): All phase wires (R, S, T) must pass through the ZCT’s central opening. If it’s a three-phase four-wire system (with a neutral), the neutral wire (N) must also pass through the ZCT. Make sure only the VFD circuit’s wires go through the ZCT, not any other circuits. The ZCT’s secondary output (usually two wires) connects to the leakage current protection relay module’s ZCT input terminals.
Leakage Current Protection Relay Module
Power Supply: The relay module needs its control power (typically 220V AC or 24V DC) to operate.
ZCT Signal Input: Connects to the ZCT’s secondary output.
Trip Output: The relay module provides one or more dry contact (normally open/normally closed) outputs. Connect this output to the control circuit of the circuit breaker’s shunt trip coil. When the relay trips, it closes the contact, energizing the shunt trip coil and causing the breaker to trip.
Test/Reset Buttons: The relay typically has test buttons (for periodic checks) and a reset button (to manually reset after a fault).
VFD (Variable Frequency Drive): The output of the circuit breaker connects to the VFD’s power input terminals.
Motor & Cable: The VFD’s output connects to the motor.