Veritas:
Maybe someone is using it somewhere, but in my career I haven't seen it.
On transformers, earthed through a resistance/reactance, the fault-current is usually relative low. This low current can be of such a low magnitude, that it can't be seen from the HV-side. While earth-faults on a solidly-earthed transformer are normally very high. Remember, on a delta/star transformer, an earth-fault current on the secondary side is seen as a phase-phase fault on the primary side.
For earth faults on a resistance/reactance earthed system:
Faults are usually too low to be seen from the HV-side, even for earth-faults on the secondary near the transformer. If you have a breaker on the secondary side, and an earth-fault develop in front of that breaker, a standby-scheme will detect it, and trip the HV-breaker.
For earth faults on a solid earthed system:
Earth-faults are usually high in magnitude and for faults near the transformer it will usually be seen by the over-current protection on the HV-side.
Now lets think about it:
The purpose of a standby relay is to trip if all other earth-protection schemes fail to remove the fault. That actually means a standby-scheme should have a long time delay to ensure positive operation for downstream schemes. Normally, during earth-fault conditions, very high earth-fault currents will flow in a solidly-earthed transformer.
If the time-delay of the standby-scheme is too long, the transformer will be damaged before the standby-scheme can operate. Over-current protection on the HV-side might even operate for such a fault (before the standby-scheme can operate)
If the time-delay is too short, it will not coordinate properly with downstream devices.
Thus, in my opinion:
Such a scheme (on a solidly-earthed system) might be a so called "white elephant" and might add no value to your system.
If you use such a scheme on a solidly-earthed transformer, you should have just a few grading-levels downstream (one or two) and you should use a relatively "quick" delay-time or time-curve, say normal/standard inverse to be really effective.
This is just my opinion, someone else might add his/her comments. In the end such a choice would be dependent on the configuration of your system.
Regards
Ralph
[red]Failure seldom stops us, it is the fear for failure that stops us - Jack Lemmon[/red]
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