BigJohn1
Electrical
- May 24, 2003
- 57
The utility I work for recently had an arc flash analysis done for our plants. It was a given that we had equipment that was "Dangerous" and would have large arc flash boundaries.
What I wasn't expecting was to find that there are a bunch of boundaries in excess of 100 feet, and sometimes much more.
Much of this is high-power generating equipment, many MVA, but I'm still having a very difficult time believing that it has the ability to induce second-degree burns across the distance of half a football field. I strongly suspect this is a case of garbage-in-garbage-out, and some of the numbers for the equations were wrong.
Does anyone have any real world experience calculating flash boundaries where they ran into numbers this high? Is it possible for these hazards to be legitimate? Thanks.
-John
What I wasn't expecting was to find that there are a bunch of boundaries in excess of 100 feet, and sometimes much more.
Much of this is high-power generating equipment, many MVA, but I'm still having a very difficult time believing that it has the ability to induce second-degree burns across the distance of half a football field. I strongly suspect this is a case of garbage-in-garbage-out, and some of the numbers for the equations were wrong.
Does anyone have any real world experience calculating flash boundaries where they ran into numbers this high? Is it possible for these hazards to be legitimate? Thanks.
-John