charlierod
Electrical
- Mar 16, 2004
- 71
Hello Dear Colleagues,
I have a 4,16 kV industrial switchgear with high impedance grounding through a ZigZag transformer limiting fault current to 50 A.
Unfortunately the MV metalclad switchgear came without zero sequence CTs and some phase CTs have a high ratio 2000/5 limiting both sensitivity and speed as fast trip times cannot be achieved without compromising security under transients such as transformer energizing and motor starting.
I have opted for maintining a good sensitivity (about 10 A primary) at the expense of speed with delays of 1 -2 seconds in order to deal with the errors of residual measurement.
The fault current itself is not dangerous and I think we are still tripping in a reasonable time to avoid a single phase fault evolving into multiphase although as far as I know this is less likely for a 4,16 kV system than for higher voltages.
I appreciatte your comments on the issue and if there is a guide with recommendations for earth fault protection settings in this kind of systems.
Regards,
Charlie
I have a 4,16 kV industrial switchgear with high impedance grounding through a ZigZag transformer limiting fault current to 50 A.
Unfortunately the MV metalclad switchgear came without zero sequence CTs and some phase CTs have a high ratio 2000/5 limiting both sensitivity and speed as fast trip times cannot be achieved without compromising security under transients such as transformer energizing and motor starting.
I have opted for maintining a good sensitivity (about 10 A primary) at the expense of speed with delays of 1 -2 seconds in order to deal with the errors of residual measurement.
The fault current itself is not dangerous and I think we are still tripping in a reasonable time to avoid a single phase fault evolving into multiphase although as far as I know this is less likely for a 4,16 kV system than for higher voltages.
I appreciatte your comments on the issue and if there is a guide with recommendations for earth fault protection settings in this kind of systems.
Regards,
Charlie