Thanks PhilGavin,
the only think is that my measuring the border accuracy you measure nothing about the relay (almost nothing). If you slowly ramp, than you are just measuring the accuracy of the measuring element. The fault does not "slowly ramp".
Some numerical relays do not even tolerate a slow ramping, as they are based on jumps in the measured quantities.
If you "jump" from a steay state pre-fault situation into the steady-state fault situation, you also know nothing about overreaching because the dc transient is not injected, CTs are not saturated, load is not exported and neither imported.... so you cannot extrapolate anything.
Testing with constant fault current does not even allow you to control the source impedance behind the relay....
The only think I believe we can just say about the relay characteristic test, is that "it is healthy", so who cares about 5%, or 10% or whatever?
Sequences of steady state are helpful, but to my opinion not to "judge" the relay by testing the accuracy of the characteristic. Of course if you see a big error, like 30%, maybe the relay has problems, but not if the error should be 2% or 5% or 3.5%. For instance we can simulate shots to test autorecloser, weak infeed situations etc. From this point of view I see no need to inject the fault with the dc transient, but for overreaching of zone1.... no. The performances are in the technical documents of the manufacturer, not in the test set.
Another think I believe is good for testing characteristic is that "in one shot" you verify your settings. It is difficult to detect that one setting is 51 ohms instead of 5.1 or viceversa, among maybe 20 different settings..
Where I maybe can see need for accuracy test is close to the load area. There the load can "slowly linearly ramp" into the characteristic, but then things change again when the circuit breaker opens, healthy phases change etc. So, even there, mayb, it is not worth to investigate on the accuracy.
Just some thoughts...