Electic:
I agree. We have had the same problem in the past with some large industrial facilities.
I'm currently working on a commercial facility with a small service size (1500kVA at the main service entrance board), and I’m running into problems with level 4 arc flash at load panels way downstream which are feed by 225kVA transformers (even with the 2 second limit imposed). On paper the results are very self explanatory – Low fault currents (in the range of 1-2kA) leading to CBs tripping on their overload as opposed to short circuit elements. This is resulting in a long arcing times and hence high incident energies available. Many commercial facilities have load panels scattered throughout the building (in hallways, corridors, and sometimes office/cubicle areas). At level 4 some of the flash protection boundaries work out to 10 and 15 feet. Does this imply that individuals cannot occupy the flash protection boundary w/out the appropriate PPE (This would imply that some hallway/corridors would be inaccessible/off limits to ordinary office workers)? (See earlier part of thread regarding flash protection boundary and covers on vs. covers off electrical panels) Am I the only person that this seems absolutely ridiculous to? Additionally, At 208VAC the limited approach boundary is still 3.5 ft, this would still make some hallways/corridors, etc inaccessible to non-qualified individuals.
How are other people performing arc flash hazard studies dealing with this? We want to make sure that individuals are warned of the potential hazards, but still maintain credibility.