Blake1981
Electrical
- Sep 17, 2008
- 4
thread238-120636
Dear all,
I am new to this site as I recently discovered it when searching for some information on the subject. After reading a very helpful post and link I have a few more questions on the subject. I have recently returned to electrical engineering after a few years in project management so sorry if im a little rusty.
I work on an oil refinery and a few weeks back we had many drives trip out on thermal overload due to high voltage on the 11kV supply. After some investigation we found that a primary VT fuse had blown. The voltage reference for the tap changer on the supply transformer is connected to phase A and C of this VT.
From the Basler paper referenced in the previous post, the voltage across the A and C phase secondary should be 1/route3 that of the primary phase to neutral voltage multiplied by the turns ratio of course. This is turn gives a low voltage reference to the tap changer which then tapped up and cause the over voltage.
My questions are these.
1) Hows in the 1/route3 calculated? (table 4 in the paper). I can calculate the zero, neg and pos voltages but i dont understand how you calculate line volts on the secondary with one phase fuse blown on the primary?
2)The tapchangers are very old but they still have a relay that is designed to drop out when no voltage is seen from the VT. In this case the transformer stays on tap because it has detected a no voltage rather than a low voltage signal. However, with 1 fuse blown i am guessing that there is enough voltage on the seconday to hold the relay in and the tapchanger has seen a low voltage signal and has tapped up to compesate. Has anybody seen this before?
If anyone gets back to me it will be much appreciated.
Thanks
Blake
Dear all,
I am new to this site as I recently discovered it when searching for some information on the subject. After reading a very helpful post and link I have a few more questions on the subject. I have recently returned to electrical engineering after a few years in project management so sorry if im a little rusty.
I work on an oil refinery and a few weeks back we had many drives trip out on thermal overload due to high voltage on the 11kV supply. After some investigation we found that a primary VT fuse had blown. The voltage reference for the tap changer on the supply transformer is connected to phase A and C of this VT.
From the Basler paper referenced in the previous post, the voltage across the A and C phase secondary should be 1/route3 that of the primary phase to neutral voltage multiplied by the turns ratio of course. This is turn gives a low voltage reference to the tap changer which then tapped up and cause the over voltage.
My questions are these.
1) Hows in the 1/route3 calculated? (table 4 in the paper). I can calculate the zero, neg and pos voltages but i dont understand how you calculate line volts on the secondary with one phase fuse blown on the primary?
2)The tapchangers are very old but they still have a relay that is designed to drop out when no voltage is seen from the VT. In this case the transformer stays on tap because it has detected a no voltage rather than a low voltage signal. However, with 1 fuse blown i am guessing that there is enough voltage on the seconday to hold the relay in and the tapchanger has seen a low voltage signal and has tapped up to compesate. Has anybody seen this before?
If anyone gets back to me it will be much appreciated.
Thanks
Blake