vandal06
Electrical
- Jan 17, 2011
- 68
I am performing a system coordination study and this relay is installed all over the client's 115 kV transmission system. My experience has been with SEL's offerings so I was immediately struck by the quadrilateral construction of the impedance elements, both for phase and ground. I'm most familiar with phase/ground mho's and quadrilateral grounds, with my experience in the latter much less than the former. SEL distance relays to my knowledge only implement phase and ground mhos and quadrilateral ground.
I have access to all the accompanying technical documentation for the ABB REL-511C relay and am somewhat familiar with the operation of the distance elements. I have reviewed the in-service settings for the relays and noticed that only 21P and 67N elements are active; ground distance have been disabled. A direct transfer trip between this terminal and the remote terminal is active. I have asked my supervisor why they would disable 21G and use 67N as primary ground protection and he thinks it's a carry over from older philosophies where ground distance relaying was not common (electromechanical units).
The quad ground distance appears to operate much differently than an SEL version. For one it is positive sequence voltage polarized whereas the SEL version has the capability for I0 or I2 polarization. I've reviewed an industry application guide that states that for long high-voltage transmission lines pilot-wire 67N is ideal and 21X is not. Does anyone have any experience with the REL-511C and can give their thoughts on why one shouldn't enable the 21X quad ground element?
I have access to all the accompanying technical documentation for the ABB REL-511C relay and am somewhat familiar with the operation of the distance elements. I have reviewed the in-service settings for the relays and noticed that only 21P and 67N elements are active; ground distance have been disabled. A direct transfer trip between this terminal and the remote terminal is active. I have asked my supervisor why they would disable 21G and use 67N as primary ground protection and he thinks it's a carry over from older philosophies where ground distance relaying was not common (electromechanical units).
The quad ground distance appears to operate much differently than an SEL version. For one it is positive sequence voltage polarized whereas the SEL version has the capability for I0 or I2 polarization. I've reviewed an industry application guide that states that for long high-voltage transmission lines pilot-wire 67N is ideal and 21X is not. Does anyone have any experience with the REL-511C and can give their thoughts on why one shouldn't enable the 21X quad ground element?