electricpete
Electrical
- May 4, 2001
- 16,774
Molded case circuit breaker instantaneous trip settings are set/checked by injecting sinusoidal current.
We specify the rms value of that test current, but of course we also know it's peak. RMS/Peak ratio for sinusoid test current is 0.707.
Now, if I measure a motor starting current with an oscilloscope, it of course has a sinusoidal component plus a decaying dc component which varies based on closing angle. This waveform has a theoretical worst case peak 2.81*LRC (assuming worst case closing angle and negligible decay). More importantly, this waveform has a rms/peak factor of as low as 61% (much lower than the sinusoidal test waveform).
If I wanted to determine whether I expect the breaker to trip for one particular measured current waveform (and determine how much margin to trip on that particular start), there are at least two ways I might think about comparing?
Method A - Compare the peak of the measured waveform to the calculated peak of the sinusoidal test waveform (ie compare to 1.41*setting).
Method B - Compare the rms value of the measured waveform (over the interval before the first current zero) to the rms value of the test waveform.
Questions:
Q1 - Which of the above would make more "sense" from a physical standpoint?
Q2 - Would you consider either of the above approaches is "bounding" in a certain direction? i.e. perhaps 1 always conservatively predicts trip even though trip may not occur.
Q3 - Perhaps neither of the above approaches is a fair comparison. It may not only be a matter of a measure of the magnitude. For example, the time before the first current zero could theoretically approach one full cycle for the motor starting waveform, but is limited to 1/2 cycle for the sinusoidal waveform. Maybe this has an effect as well?
Note, I am not really looking for recommendations on how to set an instantaneous breaker. I am aware of NEC and other guidance for breaker setting. I would really like to understand the fundamental theory governing whether the breaker magnetic trip on a given phase would trip for a given waveform on that phase...if there is such a thing.
An interesting note - the rms value of the fully offset waveform with no decay is in fact sqrt(3) * LRC - a number sometimes quoted in instantaneous breaker setting recommendations.
=====================================
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We specify the rms value of that test current, but of course we also know it's peak. RMS/Peak ratio for sinusoid test current is 0.707.
Now, if I measure a motor starting current with an oscilloscope, it of course has a sinusoidal component plus a decaying dc component which varies based on closing angle. This waveform has a theoretical worst case peak 2.81*LRC (assuming worst case closing angle and negligible decay). More importantly, this waveform has a rms/peak factor of as low as 61% (much lower than the sinusoidal test waveform).
If I wanted to determine whether I expect the breaker to trip for one particular measured current waveform (and determine how much margin to trip on that particular start), there are at least two ways I might think about comparing?
Method A - Compare the peak of the measured waveform to the calculated peak of the sinusoidal test waveform (ie compare to 1.41*setting).
Method B - Compare the rms value of the measured waveform (over the interval before the first current zero) to the rms value of the test waveform.
Questions:
Q1 - Which of the above would make more "sense" from a physical standpoint?
Q2 - Would you consider either of the above approaches is "bounding" in a certain direction? i.e. perhaps 1 always conservatively predicts trip even though trip may not occur.
Q3 - Perhaps neither of the above approaches is a fair comparison. It may not only be a matter of a measure of the magnitude. For example, the time before the first current zero could theoretically approach one full cycle for the motor starting waveform, but is limited to 1/2 cycle for the sinusoidal waveform. Maybe this has an effect as well?
Note, I am not really looking for recommendations on how to set an instantaneous breaker. I am aware of NEC and other guidance for breaker setting. I would really like to understand the fundamental theory governing whether the breaker magnetic trip on a given phase would trip for a given waveform on that phase...if there is such a thing.
An interesting note - the rms value of the fully offset waveform with no decay is in fact sqrt(3) * LRC - a number sometimes quoted in instantaneous breaker setting recommendations.
=====================================
Eng-tips forums: The best place on the web for engineering discussions.