mayanees
Electrical
- Sep 10, 2007
- 22
We are developing a design for the upgrade of a 40 year-old, 13.8 kV Emergency Power System.
The existing system consists of two (2) 3.25 MW, 13.8 kV diesel gensets. These sets energize fourteen (14) 13.8:0.48 kV substations throughout a campus-wide system. Genset operation is initiated by low-voltage (LV) sensing such that upon detection of a 480V loss at any of 250 ATSs, the system is on-line within 10 seconds and all 14 substations are energized.
Only the ATS that lost power is sourced from the emergency system during the genset operation.
I'm writing to get opinions from folks experienced with this type of system, as to the advantages or disadvantages of this mode of operation, that being an emergency system that rests de-energized, waiting for power loss.
I think it would make more sense from a reliability standpoint to bring a Utility source to the generator distribution board that would keep all 14 substation transformers energized, rather than have the system sit idle in a de-energized state. I think the transformers and cables would have less issues with condensation and such if they sat energized.
But the system has operated like this for 40 years, with only about 1100 hours on the gensets, so I don't know if I can present an argument to change the mode of operation. Transformer losses will cause increased cost of operation, but for an emergency system, I think the increase in reliability would be valued.
Thoughts, opinions and comments are appreciated.
John M
The existing system consists of two (2) 3.25 MW, 13.8 kV diesel gensets. These sets energize fourteen (14) 13.8:0.48 kV substations throughout a campus-wide system. Genset operation is initiated by low-voltage (LV) sensing such that upon detection of a 480V loss at any of 250 ATSs, the system is on-line within 10 seconds and all 14 substations are energized.
Only the ATS that lost power is sourced from the emergency system during the genset operation.
I'm writing to get opinions from folks experienced with this type of system, as to the advantages or disadvantages of this mode of operation, that being an emergency system that rests de-energized, waiting for power loss.
I think it would make more sense from a reliability standpoint to bring a Utility source to the generator distribution board that would keep all 14 substation transformers energized, rather than have the system sit idle in a de-energized state. I think the transformers and cables would have less issues with condensation and such if they sat energized.
But the system has operated like this for 40 years, with only about 1100 hours on the gensets, so I don't know if I can present an argument to change the mode of operation. Transformer losses will cause increased cost of operation, but for an emergency system, I think the increase in reliability would be valued.
Thoughts, opinions and comments are appreciated.
John M