Latango
Electrical
- Dec 12, 2006
- 30
My boss asked me today to figure out what short circuit capacity a switchboard would need to be designed for given:
2 x gensets with 22kA fault rating each (1 MW 50hz 415V sets, got the kA from manufacturer)
Synced onto a common bus in the switchboard
Each genset will be connected through a circuit breaker to the bus via 3 parallel 100 ft long flex cable at 240sqmm, that according to the book each have an ac resistance at 50hz of aroung .09 ohms/km each.
Note, this won't be used as a definitive because it's been outsourced to a real engineer (I'm only a young foolish electrician) but it's along the lines of a learning experience.
Do I treat the 2 gensets as a 2MW with 44kA, figure out the effective impedance of that using ohms law, then add that impedance with the total impedance of the cables per phase, and again use ohms law to figure out amps = 415v / total z ?
Note - this isn't an assignment. I finished my apprentiship a few years ago now, just not needed to do this sort of thinking before.
2 x gensets with 22kA fault rating each (1 MW 50hz 415V sets, got the kA from manufacturer)
Synced onto a common bus in the switchboard
Each genset will be connected through a circuit breaker to the bus via 3 parallel 100 ft long flex cable at 240sqmm, that according to the book each have an ac resistance at 50hz of aroung .09 ohms/km each.
Note, this won't be used as a definitive because it's been outsourced to a real engineer (I'm only a young foolish electrician) but it's along the lines of a learning experience.
Do I treat the 2 gensets as a 2MW with 44kA, figure out the effective impedance of that using ohms law, then add that impedance with the total impedance of the cables per phase, and again use ohms law to figure out amps = 415v / total z ?
Note - this isn't an assignment. I finished my apprentiship a few years ago now, just not needed to do this sort of thinking before.