deltawhy
Electrical
- Jun 1, 2011
- 95
Hello,
I work in a consulting firm doing low voltage distribution design. A while back I had thought of an idea for a fault current limiting device using a saturable reactor. I immediately looked it up on the internet to see if it had been done already. Of course, it has, but only in high voltage applications. Since that I have been doing in depth feasibility studies and researching the best method in which to do this. I have concluded that it can be in fact a viable product and has a wide range of applications. With such an emphasis now on arc flash mitigation and safety it can definitely be marketable. I understand there are complications with utility coordination, incorporation in already approved switchgear (which wouldn't be necessary), fault detection relaying, etc. etc.
My question is: Has anyone seen a product by either big manufacturers or small companies that provides this limitation that they have used or readily spec? (keep in mind I do not mean current limiting breakers / fuses)
Thank you for your time.
I work in a consulting firm doing low voltage distribution design. A while back I had thought of an idea for a fault current limiting device using a saturable reactor. I immediately looked it up on the internet to see if it had been done already. Of course, it has, but only in high voltage applications. Since that I have been doing in depth feasibility studies and researching the best method in which to do this. I have concluded that it can be in fact a viable product and has a wide range of applications. With such an emphasis now on arc flash mitigation and safety it can definitely be marketable. I understand there are complications with utility coordination, incorporation in already approved switchgear (which wouldn't be necessary), fault detection relaying, etc. etc.
My question is: Has anyone seen a product by either big manufacturers or small companies that provides this limitation that they have used or readily spec? (keep in mind I do not mean current limiting breakers / fuses)
Thank you for your time.