muniengineer
Electrical
- Jul 28, 2010
- 3
We have two feeders coming out of substations that we continue to have issues with but have no explanation for. The similarity between these feeders is they leave the substation via (3) 500 MCM copper tape shield conductors with a bare 4/0 neutral all pulled into a 6" PVC conduit. They then rise above ground for a few spans before dipping back underground to get under roadways. From there they both return overheard and continue on. Once feeder is at a 4kV station and the other is at a 15 kV station and they are on opposite ends of town. Anytime we get a phase to phase or a phase-phase-ground fault on either one of these feeders, we get a second operation that always shows fault current levels way above any possible fault currents that our modeling shows us. It is always around 6,000 amps on 15kV and 7,200 amps on the 4kV feeder. This is true no matter where the initial fault occurs on the feeder. If the feeders experience a phase to ground fault, everything operates as normal and we have not seen the second operation with the phantom fault currents. Has anyone ever experienced anything similar? I have tried to lean to some type of circulating current being induced but I am having a hard time making that plausible because of the independent neutral. The neutral is attached to the overhead neutral and then directly back to the substation ground grid. Any help on figuring this out would be appreciated.