jeebusmn
Electrical
- May 1, 2007
- 51
I am trying to determine if it is worth while to install a larger conductor based on savings due to reduced losses. I thought this might be worthwhile looking into because the cost difference between a 336.4 and a 1590 transmission line per a mile is only 70k.
At the company I work for, the way that this has been determined is by looking at the Summer Peak MVA flow across a section that is going to be reconductored and multipling that power flow by the load factor, 0.49. This then gives you your I^2R losses.
The powerflow program that I am using, PSSE, can give me the losses in our sytem before and after I put a transmission line in place. I put a new line in our summer peak models and it spits out what the system losses are. This part is great and I would really like to use it to determine the true savings of a larger conductor.
The problem I am running into is trying to determine what the average system power flow values are. On the spreadsheets that used to be put together, it was just assumed that the average powerflow for the year would be the load factor (0.49) times the summer peak load. I was hoping that I would be able to just reduce our generation and loads by to 49% in our summer peak model to get the yearly average losses. I tried that and the losses in our system dropped from 65 kw to 35 kw, which is less than what I expected. I suspect power from our neighbors is flowing into our system. I was expecting due to I^2*R that if I halved the loads that the losses would drop to something close to 25%. Am I missing something? I would really like to use the simulator to give a better estimate in how much energy is saved with putting a new conductor in but with the above problems I don’t know how well I can trust the result.
How do other utilities go about this? Are simulators used? Do they just put spreadsheets together? Are there simple rules of thumb?