Application Note
Troubleshooting 
power harmonics
Basic troubleshooting using 
multimeters and current clamps
A mystery is occurring in today’s office buildings and 
manufacturing plants. Transformers supplying seemingly 
average loads are overheating. Neutral conductors in 
balanced circuits are overheating from excessive loads. 
Circuit breakers are tripping for no apparent reason. 
Yet the standard troubleshooting procedures show 
everything to be normal. So what’s the problem? 
In one word—harmonics.
New technology,  
new challenges
Harmonics are the byproducts 
of modern electronics. They 
are especially prevalent wher-
ever there are large numbers of 
personal computers, adjustable 
speed drives, and other types of 
equipment that draw current in 
short pulses.
This equipment is designed 
to draw current only during a 
controlled portion of the incom-
ing voltage waveform. While 
this dramatically improves 
efficiency, it causes harmon-
ics in the load current. And that 
causes overheated transformers 
and neutrals, as well as tripped 
circuit breakers.
If you were to listen to an ordi-
nary 60-cycle power line, you’d 
hear a monotone hum. When 
harmonics are present, you hear 
a different tune, rich with high 
Figure 1. Near sine wave.
Figure 2A. Distorted current waveform.
Figure 2B. Distorted voltage waveform.
notes. The problem is even more 
evident when you look at the 
waveform. A normal 60-cycle 
power line voltage appears on 
the oscilloscope as a near sine 
wave (Figure 1). When harmon-
ics are present, the waveform 
is distorted (Figure 2A and 2B). 
These waves are described as 
non-sinusoidal. The voltage and 
current waveforms are no longer 
simply related-hence the term 
“non-linear.”
Getting to the root of the 
problem
Finding the problem is relatively 
easy once you know what to look 
for and where to look. Harmonics 
symptoms are usually anything 
but subtle. This application note 
provides some basic pointers on 
how to find harmonics and some 
suggestions of ways to address 
the problems they create.
From the Fluke Digital Library @ www.fluke.com/library
Application Note








