wcaseyharman wrote:
Wouldn’t hurt to double check that the taps are set the same too if so equipped. If these have LTCs then each time you would need to make sure they are on the same tap.
All the directions stating it's only but absolutely necessary to confirm phasing the first time are spot on.
As to paralleling transformers, I was trained to either adjust taps so that both sources are at as near the same voltage as possible, or, depending on the prevailing conditions, to actually have the voltage on the transformer to be loaded just a little lower than on the already loaded unit; that way, if the in service bank is carrying a very heavy reactive current, due to either heavily inductive or extremely capacitive loads, there will be little if any change to the voltage supplying the load.
Having the incoming transformer secondary voltage a little lower will tend to cause a small reactive current to flow through that transformer back to the source upon loading, compensating either somewhat or completely for the rise in voltage that will normally accompany the halving of the impedance between the system and the load when the second trafo goes on load.
Then and only then are the taps adjusted to place equal loads on them so as to minimize circulating currents or, if swapping transformers, to zero off as closely as possible the reactive flow through the transformer to be removed from service. Doing this minimizes the amount of current flowing at "zero crossing" and maximizes breaker contact life.
Naturally the corollary for this is that adequate metering must be provided to give the operators the conditions visibility needed to not only continuously monitor but also to adjust flows as necessary to enable optimal switching.
An extra benefit that accrues to providing this metering is that if there is a loss of cooling on one of two transformers in parallel service it becomes highly desirable to skew the taps so that there is as little reactive load as possible on the transformer with the cooling trouble, mitigating the temperature rise of that transformer until the staff can get there to see what the problem is.
CR
"As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another." [Proverbs 27:17, NIV]