With more types of protective schemes on a transformer, the more different faults-conditions you will be able to detect. See REF-protection as a scheme to protect for faults from near the neutral towards the phases and diff-protection for protection from the phases towards the neutral. With a combination of both you can protect the whole winding, while with only one type you'll just protect a certain portion of the winding.
From IEEE C37.91-1985: (sorry, a little outdated)
On a grounded neutral system, it is possible to isolate the transformer case from ground except for a single point. A CT and O/C relay at the grounding point would detect any internal ground fault or bushing flashover. Although effective, several problems are encountered. The system shall be tested periodically to determine that no accidental grounds have been added. Incorrect operation can result from accidental grounds from power tools and trsf auxiliary equipment, or from a failed lightning arrester discharge if the arrester is mounted on the trsf.
KJvR:
The trend today is towards low impedance REF-schemes. A few years ago a lot of problems were encountered with low impedance REF-schemes, but these faults were largely minimized with the era of microprocessor relays. One must not stagnate with old stuff (although nothing wrong with it) but you can do so much more with the new technology.
I am not sure if you can use metering CTs on the low impedance schemes - normally are protection CTs recommended. (and not necessarily class X CTs like on high impedance systems) I think you might be able to get away with metering CTs, but the burden imposed on the CTs must be very low. Thus, during through-fault conditions, the CTs must still be able to drive the relay.
Regards
Ralph
[red]Failure seldom stops us, it is the fear for failure that stops us - Jack Lemmon[/red]
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