To answer your implied question as to whether or not the RTDs are even necessary when you have an overload relay and unbalance protection, the answer may be more code related that technical.
From a technical standpoint, the answer would be no. An OL relay is the only thing absolutely necessary. But on very big very expensive motors, relying only on an OL relay for motor protection is like saying you are willing to drive a very expensive car by looking only at the "idiot lights" on the dash board, not the gauges that can give you an idea of what is ABOUT to happen by watching a trend. RTDs, fed into a Motor Protection Relay, accomplish that extra degree of protection that can help prevent a very costly repair and often more importantly, extremely expensive down time. The general rule is that the bigger the motor, the more important it is going to be in the process of your plant doing what it does. So having the best protection system for it provides a higher degree of protection against unexpected shutdowns.
That said, what Carlos said is right. Generally there are at least 6 RTDs, and although the MPR may be looking at all 6, we usually enable a feature called "voting" in which only 3 of them need to agree with each other to guard against the exact scenario you are experiencing. Remember, it's all about the down time. So check your MPR programming and make sure that "voting" is enabled, it may allow you to get up and running again until your next scheduled maintenance shutdown where you can fix the bad RTD.
The one caveat I alluded to above in it being a code issue has to do with it being an explosion proof motor. I don't know for sure because we don't need RTDs in Exp. motors in the US, but I've heard that some countries require them. Worth checking into.
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