Bronzeado
Electrical
- Jan 6, 2008
- 272
Hi folks,
Has anybody experience on neutral instability during the energizing of a wye-delta transformer?
The transformer is energized throught the high voltage (230 kV) of which windings are wye connected and the neutral grounded.
The low voltage (69 kV) windings are conected in delta and, therefore, have a "ficticious" neutral point.
My questions are:
1. How this "ficticious" neutral point behaves with relation to the grounding during the transformer energizing?
2. If there is a TP on each phase of the delta side with its primary winding connected between the phase and the grounding, what kind of voltage I will get from this TP?
3. Is it possible to get a phase to grounding voltage bigger the phase to phase voltage?
I would appreciate your thoughts!
Best regards,
Herivelto Bronzeado
Has anybody experience on neutral instability during the energizing of a wye-delta transformer?
The transformer is energized throught the high voltage (230 kV) of which windings are wye connected and the neutral grounded.
The low voltage (69 kV) windings are conected in delta and, therefore, have a "ficticious" neutral point.
My questions are:
1. How this "ficticious" neutral point behaves with relation to the grounding during the transformer energizing?
2. If there is a TP on each phase of the delta side with its primary winding connected between the phase and the grounding, what kind of voltage I will get from this TP?
3. Is it possible to get a phase to grounding voltage bigger the phase to phase voltage?
I would appreciate your thoughts!
Best regards,
Herivelto Bronzeado