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Um . . . what am I missing? Typo?waross: The secondary will see any inrush caused by loads that are connected when the transformer is energized.
Did you ever look at a raw event capture of that? You don't see the load initially, all you see is all the transformers being energized (aka inrush). Yeah, there's a bunch more load to carry for the first bit than there was before the circuit tripped, but most of what a cold load setting really does is keep you from tripping on the transformer inrush. I see that getting above the instantaneous setting, but I rarely see true load getting above the instantaneous setting.I picked up many an interrupted feeder over the course of my career, but it was never part of our jargon, ever, to refer to feeder cold load pick-up current as supplied by a trafo's secondary windings as any kind of "inrush;" that was reserved specifically for transformer energization and the harmonics etc. that are generated when a trafo is placed on potential.
davidbeach: Did you ever look at a raw event capture of that? You don't see the load initially, all you see is all the transformers being energized (aka inrush).
davidbeach: Yeah, there's a bunch more load to carry for the first bit than there was before the circuit tripped, but most of what a cold load setting really does is keep you from tripping on the transformer inrush. I see that getting above the instantaneous setting, but I rarely see true load getting above the instantaneous setting.