electricnewbie
Electrical
- Aug 6, 2010
- 12
I am fresh out of college and entered a Substation/Transmission Engineering position, where currently there is a debate on Breaker Fail philosophy.
The question is:
On a radial 115kv substation (designed to expand to breaker and a half scheme) is it best to:
1. Use a separate 50BF relay initiated by the primary and secondary line protection relays, or
2. Program in a breaker fail scheme into both the primary and secondary line protection relays eliminating the need for another relay, knowing that the breaker fail scheme is a Breaker Fail, not a Relay Fail scheme.
The argument seems to be between saving money by reducing relays (since programming into the relays does the same thing as having a separate 50BF relay), and making it easier to test the breaker fail by having a separate relay with separate test switches, etc.
Any suggestions or comments on the best breaker fail philosophy, or what is used in your communities/companies?
The question is:
On a radial 115kv substation (designed to expand to breaker and a half scheme) is it best to:
1. Use a separate 50BF relay initiated by the primary and secondary line protection relays, or
2. Program in a breaker fail scheme into both the primary and secondary line protection relays eliminating the need for another relay, knowing that the breaker fail scheme is a Breaker Fail, not a Relay Fail scheme.
The argument seems to be between saving money by reducing relays (since programming into the relays does the same thing as having a separate 50BF relay), and making it easier to test the breaker fail by having a separate relay with separate test switches, etc.
Any suggestions or comments on the best breaker fail philosophy, or what is used in your communities/companies?