111R
Electrical
- May 4, 2012
- 114
I've seen a few test results for CTs that were operated with an open secondary circuit. The CTs are relaying-type, bushing CTs with an accuracy rating of C400. The excitation curve is distorted and the CT saturates below 100V when using secondary excitation test equipment. An identical, properly-operating CT has an IEEE 45 knee point around 280-300 VAC.
The strange thing is that the ratio and winding resistance is accurate and comparable with good CTs on the same breaker. There is less than 0.5% ratio error and the winding resistance is in the 500 mohm range.
With the bad excitation curve following operation of an open circuited CT, I would assume that the CT has shorted secondary windings due to insulation flashover. Why would this not skew the ratio and winding resistance readings?
Do CTs normally short turn-to-turn or turn-to-core?
Thanks!
The strange thing is that the ratio and winding resistance is accurate and comparable with good CTs on the same breaker. There is less than 0.5% ratio error and the winding resistance is in the 500 mohm range.
With the bad excitation curve following operation of an open circuited CT, I would assume that the CT has shorted secondary windings due to insulation flashover. Why would this not skew the ratio and winding resistance readings?
Do CTs normally short turn-to-turn or turn-to-core?
Thanks!