Great discussion gentlemen! Lots of food for thought. On the Astoria "BLue Sky" failure, I was involved with the design/build construction of the Astoria-1 and Astoria-II independent power plants tying into the ConEd system. Plant 1 tied into that bus that had the spectacular failure. Plant II tied in at a new 345kV GIS substation we built and turned over to ConEd. We hired a good NY State Consulting firm to do the relaying design and commissioning.
That New Years when I saw the Astoria area switchyards on the late news, I was spooked. I wanted to call the plants and ask what happened. But I had to get my info from this forum. All the while I was wondering if my designs had created issues. Later, I learned many details that I can't share due to NDA's. Astoria 1 tripped off line and lost auxiliary power. Astoria II was not affected and continued full generation, supplying the fault through the 345-138(?)kV transformer(s). I doubt the many other generators at the Astoria facility were running. I was relieved that none of my relaying exacerbated or contributed to the issue.
I started in relaying with WWII vintage induction disk relays in the relay shop at Washington Water Power (now Avista) as a 1971 summer intern. (Summer help and summer not). EM relays were relatively easy to set and understand. A new GE relay using solid state components came in and I was assigned to help the senior tech, Andy, check it out. He was retiring at the end of that summer. His degree was from the WSU EE Department when it was still Washington State College in the 1930's. After two days of playing with it, he had taught me a lot and had tested the distance settings using resistor banks, variacs, phase shifters, timers, and a lot of meters and wires on the bench and floor. Another tech came by and asked Andy if he had that solid state figured out yet? His response was "Not really, I'm still trying to understand that new-fangled AC power."
I'm retiring in four days and feel a lot like Andy. I'm still trying to figure out AC power. I've designed a few gigawatts of power plants and have set Basler, GEC, ABB, Alstom, Beckwith, GE, Westinghouse, Siemens, SEL, Schneider, and a bunch of other brands including some Chinese relays with no manuals. I know a little bit about each but am a master of none. I totally agree with David (who used to help me with those BE relays) that you will spend a lot of time and money learning a new relay's programming language and operation. (Examples: does pu mean per unit of the machine rating, the CT ratio, the 1A/5A relay input or?? Is the setting in secondary amps or per unit? Why do the GE and SEL relays when programmed with the same IEEE standard curve have a 10:1 ratio in operating times?) If I had access to a relay and a test set we could answer some of those issues before they tripped the plant during commissioning. BTW, I don't like Breaker Failure Relays, I have tripped plants with BFI signals, more than once.
I got to do relaying about once a year or whenever a client had a problem. That meant a relearning curve every year. Having SEL in our backyard was a big help. We took a class from Lew Blackburn, who lived near our office. He would gladly offer free advice when we asked. I worry that there are still some issues out there I never knew about due to my cursory experience. I believe at least one of our forum members got to correct some of my issues over the years. That's the frustration of always building for a developer (first cost rules) and never getting to see the facilities after commissioning or find out what problems arose over time.
That is why this forum is so helpful, we can learn from each other, or I should say, I've learned a lot from your posts and questions.
Sorry I hijacked this thread, but I just wanted to wish you all good luck and Happy New Year and encourage you to keep the lights on, literally. And thank you for the help, advice and support over the years that helped me achieve some of my goals. I might do some consulting, but I'll probably just sit on the sidelines and watch you gentlemen argue/discuss and teach the younger generation.
One last piece of advice. Do not use your real name. It makes it too easy for a client to find your posts and use them against you during arbitration hearings. That is why I backed out for a couple years. Also, I enjoyed following the forum so much, my productivity was affected. Or maybe I was just getting old and slow.
Bottom line, use breaker failure logic in the relay and use redundant relays. As David said, it keeps it simple and prevents those Breaker Failure Initiate (BFI) problems.
Thanks
rcwilson