dwlawrence
Electrical
- Dec 30, 2008
- 12
I am assessing the impact of a 1600 kW synchronous generator located approximately 15 kM out from a 13.8 kV substation. There is no regulation on the feeder and the utility maintains a fixed tap that maxes the voltage at the sub out at about 106% which results in 101% at feeder end at peak load. At minimum load, feeder end is around 104%. When the generation is added the voltage at the generator is around 108% at peak load and 110% at minimum load. I can get it down by absorbing more VArs (don't get me going on vars and Vars and VArs)at the generator but that seems crude.
The feeder conductor is a mix of 1/0 ACSR and 3/0 ACSR and there is one section that's #2 ACSR which of course is the root of the problem but reconductoring is not a preferred option.
Does anyone have any ideas for mitigation? I was thinking about a feeder regulator at the substation but I've seen voltage profiles for regulators that are all over the place with high voltage at low loads and not a lot of apparent intelligence. Are they any smarter now? If I could set it to sense if the generation was on or off and boost or buck accordingly this might work.
Comments?
The feeder conductor is a mix of 1/0 ACSR and 3/0 ACSR and there is one section that's #2 ACSR which of course is the root of the problem but reconductoring is not a preferred option.
Does anyone have any ideas for mitigation? I was thinking about a feeder regulator at the substation but I've seen voltage profiles for regulators that are all over the place with high voltage at low loads and not a lot of apparent intelligence. Are they any smarter now? If I could set it to sense if the generation was on or off and boost or buck accordingly this might work.
Comments?