killerwatt
Electrical
- May 5, 2006
- 2
There have been a series of "on-site" loss of phase situations at a large nursing home in Vermont. The nursing home operates on the load side of a utility owned primary meter. The configuration consists of a 3 phase system (12.5KV) that radially branchs off the main utility line, pass thru a primary meter to a transfer switch/generator arrangement. The transfer switch will operate upon loss of utility power.
Their load consists of several single and 3 phase transformers that feed various facilities on their campus.
All of these loads are individually fused with overhead line cutouts.
The Problem: When a phase is lost (1 fuse opens) on the campus, the transfer control senses loss of phase and transfers to generator power. The generator will start but will quickly transfer back to utility almost immediately, causing an oscillating effect between sensing a loss of power and incorrectly viewing "regenerative voltage" as a restoration of utility power (a phantom voltage?).
The entire system, both utility and customer are wired grd-wye/grd-wye, 12.5KV.
Generator reps and transfer switch techs have been on-site and upgraded the t-switch control in an attempt to more properly sense and correctly react to the available voltage under normal and single phasing conditions. After recent changes, the problem still exists.
As a utility engineer that has worked extensively on grounded wye systems, I have not experienced regenerated voltage upon loss of one phase. I have, tho, seen a wye delta connection act as a grounding bank upon loss of 1 phase IF the high side was tied to ground and not floated. This is not the case here.
Any ideas are appreciated. Thanks.
cluster of transformer locations that are all individually protected by fuses.
Their load consists of several single and 3 phase transformers that feed various facilities on their campus.
All of these loads are individually fused with overhead line cutouts.
The Problem: When a phase is lost (1 fuse opens) on the campus, the transfer control senses loss of phase and transfers to generator power. The generator will start but will quickly transfer back to utility almost immediately, causing an oscillating effect between sensing a loss of power and incorrectly viewing "regenerative voltage" as a restoration of utility power (a phantom voltage?).
The entire system, both utility and customer are wired grd-wye/grd-wye, 12.5KV.
Generator reps and transfer switch techs have been on-site and upgraded the t-switch control in an attempt to more properly sense and correctly react to the available voltage under normal and single phasing conditions. After recent changes, the problem still exists.
As a utility engineer that has worked extensively on grounded wye systems, I have not experienced regenerated voltage upon loss of one phase. I have, tho, seen a wye delta connection act as a grounding bank upon loss of 1 phase IF the high side was tied to ground and not floated. This is not the case here.
Any ideas are appreciated. Thanks.
cluster of transformer locations that are all individually protected by fuses.