JimmyXWang
Electrical
- Feb 6, 2013
- 2
thread238-283362 talked about CT inter-core coupling which is special issue in IEEE C57.13.1-2006 clause 16.3, and Mr. lindsayspeters (Electrical) at 7 Nov 10 21:33 had replying: This problem may be due to the core problem because of the air-gap. There is some leakage at the gap. The leakage flux will induce a voltage around windings. If the gap is the cause, the induced voltage can be eliminated by rotating the CT.
My querstion:
1. Does IEEE C57.13.1-2006 considered air-gap CT situation?
2. Is it worthy to check air-gap CT inter-core coupling situation on site? Or manufacture should have done it in the shop to provide data for site re-verification if required?
3. How to quantify the testing about air-gap CT inter-core coupling situation, instead of using voltage to verify according IEEE C57.13.1-2006, since we alway usually get high volatge due to the air-gap CT inter-core coupling.
4. We receive the the CT whatever bushing CT or other types as a whole entity. (1). How can we or (2). do we need to fix it if inter-coupling happens without manaufacture involed?
We have done this test and proposed alternative mehtod & cretiea for verifying inter-core coupling isuse, but here I want to hear the opions from guys have experienced issue and manufacture guys like Mr. Scottf and Mr.Randyman. Thanks.
Appedix: IEEE C57.13.1-2006, clause: 16.3 Inter-core coupling check:
In many cases, such as circuit breaker bushings and separately mounted extra-high-voltage CTs, several secondary cores are mounted in close proximity on the same primary lead. It is possible to have coupling between these cores that may not appear as a short-circuited turn in the excitation test, Clause 12, but which can cause a detectable imbalance in a bus differential relay circuit. Inter-core coupling occurs when a spurious metallic conducting path is established that encircles more than one CT. It may not be detectable with the excitation test if enough resistance is present in the conducting path.
Inter-core coupling will occur if one of the following conditions is present:
a) If the CT support is in contact with the bushing ground sleeve, making a single turn conducting path around the bushing CT.
b) If a surge protector across the H1–H2 terminals of an oil-filled CT is short circuited or if the H2 insulation fails.
c) If the insulation of grading shields surrounding the cores of an SF6-filled CT fails.
d) If the insulation on the metal support for the primary insulation on an oil-filled CT fails and establishes a conducting path through the support.
To determine if there is coupling between cores, the excitation test should be repeated, and the voltage across the full winding on each of the adjacent cores should be measured one at a time with all other current-transformer secondary windings shorted. A high-impedance voltmeter (20 000 [1]/V or greater) will read less than 1 V or 2 V if there is no inter-core coupling. If there is coupling, the voltage will be substantially higher.
My querstion:
1. Does IEEE C57.13.1-2006 considered air-gap CT situation?
2. Is it worthy to check air-gap CT inter-core coupling situation on site? Or manufacture should have done it in the shop to provide data for site re-verification if required?
3. How to quantify the testing about air-gap CT inter-core coupling situation, instead of using voltage to verify according IEEE C57.13.1-2006, since we alway usually get high volatge due to the air-gap CT inter-core coupling.
4. We receive the the CT whatever bushing CT or other types as a whole entity. (1). How can we or (2). do we need to fix it if inter-coupling happens without manaufacture involed?
We have done this test and proposed alternative mehtod & cretiea for verifying inter-core coupling isuse, but here I want to hear the opions from guys have experienced issue and manufacture guys like Mr. Scottf and Mr.Randyman. Thanks.
Appedix: IEEE C57.13.1-2006, clause: 16.3 Inter-core coupling check:
In many cases, such as circuit breaker bushings and separately mounted extra-high-voltage CTs, several secondary cores are mounted in close proximity on the same primary lead. It is possible to have coupling between these cores that may not appear as a short-circuited turn in the excitation test, Clause 12, but which can cause a detectable imbalance in a bus differential relay circuit. Inter-core coupling occurs when a spurious metallic conducting path is established that encircles more than one CT. It may not be detectable with the excitation test if enough resistance is present in the conducting path.
Inter-core coupling will occur if one of the following conditions is present:
a) If the CT support is in contact with the bushing ground sleeve, making a single turn conducting path around the bushing CT.
b) If a surge protector across the H1–H2 terminals of an oil-filled CT is short circuited or if the H2 insulation fails.
c) If the insulation of grading shields surrounding the cores of an SF6-filled CT fails.
d) If the insulation on the metal support for the primary insulation on an oil-filled CT fails and establishes a conducting path through the support.
To determine if there is coupling between cores, the excitation test should be repeated, and the voltage across the full winding on each of the adjacent cores should be measured one at a time with all other current-transformer secondary windings shorted. A high-impedance voltmeter (20 000 [1]/V or greater) will read less than 1 V or 2 V if there is no inter-core coupling. If there is coupling, the voltage will be substantially higher.