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Floating Neutral with Single Phase Inverters in machinery

Hi, As a new member I thought I would throw out my first question from a recent experience. 

I had a customer who bought a machine which had Single phase supplied servo motors & a Single phase Supplied Inverter. Each Servo drive was supplied by a phase

Servo 1 - L1 - N

Servo 2 - L2 - N

Servo 3 - L3 - N 

Inverter L Something to N.

These where protected by Type C MCBs in the control cabinet. The machine had a 3Pole Isolator only isolating the Phases. 

ISSUE.

The Electrician had wired a new 32a 5 Pin Plug to supply the machine. Upon commissioning the machine our engineer had done a voltage check & phase rotation check at the supply coming into the machine which. had tested     230v  L1-N, L2-N L3-N.    400 v L1-L2.   L1-L3.  L2-L3.       230v  L1-E, L2-E L3-E

As far as the engineer was concerned the correct voltages tested out ok and the next step was to turn on the machine. 

Big Puff of smoke which took out the cooling fan, 24v PSU & single phase inverter. 

When we looked into the issue, it turned out the electrician had not wires the neutral in the distribution board assuming they only needed 3 Phase. Checking the voltage between Line & Neutral gave us almost 400v when the machine was on. It appears the voltage supplying the Servo Drives had no where for the current to go with the disconnected neutral and created a potential through the neutral providing all the single phase devices with 400V. However when the machine was switched off, the neutral was not switched and a return path must of been created through the drives or PSU to Ground. 

Question

What are the regulations on protecting single phase drives with using more than 1 phase in the same cabinet & what devices should be used to protect against this from happening?

Thanks

Symon 

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