Tscott8201
Electrical
- Jan 7, 2009
- 11
All,
I've been approached by our metering department regarding a generator a member has installed for the purposes of peak shaving. This generator syncs with the utility and then assumes a portion of the members load to curtail the members peak load for load management purposes. On a recent meter read, the generator was running and they noticed that the phasors noted by the metering were out of the ordinary and so they asked me if it's something we should be worried about and I'm honestly not sure. Below are images of the metering values provided from the generator before and after the generator assumes a portion of the load. As you can see, CØ appears to be less loaded than AØ and BØ leading to a 25A neutral current while on utility which is to be expected. Upon generator syncing, the Neutral current jumps to 127A and the other current phasors swing out of their normal orientation. The neutral current is what has me flummoxed. We put a power recorder on the meter and we've seen neutral currents as high as 320A but at a measured voltage of .3V to 2V. Is this normal or is this something we need to push back on the member about.
Tom
Meter values utility only.
Meter values generator synced with utility.
I've been approached by our metering department regarding a generator a member has installed for the purposes of peak shaving. This generator syncs with the utility and then assumes a portion of the members load to curtail the members peak load for load management purposes. On a recent meter read, the generator was running and they noticed that the phasors noted by the metering were out of the ordinary and so they asked me if it's something we should be worried about and I'm honestly not sure. Below are images of the metering values provided from the generator before and after the generator assumes a portion of the load. As you can see, CØ appears to be less loaded than AØ and BØ leading to a 25A neutral current while on utility which is to be expected. Upon generator syncing, the Neutral current jumps to 127A and the other current phasors swing out of their normal orientation. The neutral current is what has me flummoxed. We put a power recorder on the meter and we've seen neutral currents as high as 320A but at a measured voltage of .3V to 2V. Is this normal or is this something we need to push back on the member about.
Tom
Meter values utility only.

Meter values generator synced with utility.
