As mentioned by Robert, the “short”, i.e. the underrated meter, occurred before the fuses. No reason they should have blown. Their outer casings were shattered by the plasma blast. It is probable that upstream fuses or breakers did react. But when what is effectively a dead short is applied to conductors at 4 kV with 100’s of amps available, the usual types of fuses and breakers aren’t going to prevent an arc flash. If you’ve caused a short at more than 12 V than on anything that that was fused, you probably saw a spark at the short as the fuse was blowing. That small bit of plasma was likely harmless. Now, imagine it 100,000 or a million times larger.
There is a huge safety difference in applying our common multimeters to high voltage sources like a cattle prod or even a microwave transformer versus industrial switchgear and motor controllers. Usually, on the lower current equipment, only the meter will be damaged internally. Long ago, I foolishly tried to measure the voltage of a cattle prod with a Beckman multimeter. Yup, it died but was fixable. On high voltage, high amperage sources, ordinary multimeters are bombs.
Hard to know if the insulation on the three supply wires entering the back of the cabinet was rated for 4 kV. However, in the “before” picture, they are lying against the back cabinet wall, which was presumably grounded, and they look OK. The other wires in the cabinet were probably carrying relatively low (240 V or less) voltage for sensing and control. Can anyone identify the transformers?
The case was presented originally at an IEEE symposium on safety and then discussed in EC&M magazine. I believe it’s a fairly accurate depiction. Watch the video; it’s happened before. On youtube and elsewhere, you can watch an arc flash occur. They can be incredibly powerful. This is why working with this kind of equipment live should be done with strong PPE and tools that can be used at a distance. And never done alone except in emergencies involving a threat to safety of people.
Mike