FreddyNurk
Electrical
- Dec 21, 2005
- 939
Folks of Eng-Tips,
I've got an interesting situation thats come up in amongst site drawing reviews for something completely unrelated. We manage the upgrades and installation for a number of remote (i.e. isolated grid) power stations in Australia. Its come to my attention recently that some of the installations do not have any circuit breakers, rather that contactors of a similar continuous current rating have been used, and PLCs have been used to detect overcurrent situations and consequently open the contactor. Each station typically has 3 generators, each about 125kW capacity.
These installations have been in operation (apparently fault free) for a good 10 years. A quick assessment of the potential instantaneous fault current gives the indication that the contactor's withstand rating may be exceeded for multiple sets online at once, a situation I'm told is typical for some parts of the day.
I've looked at some of the relevant standards, and note that 'contactor' isn't specifically excluded from such use, though I note that 'automatic disconnection' is a requirement and don't believe that a contactor meets this requirement. (AS3000)
The other counter argument that I've been presented with is that the station is likely to stall rather than present a large (or even somewhat modest) fault current, a situation that I believe is quite likely, given that the alternators don't have field forcing fitted.
Nevertheless I'm of the belief that at the very least, suitable short circuit protection is a requirement, and that contactors don't meet this requirement. There are no coordinating fuses fitted either.
Comments?
I've got an interesting situation thats come up in amongst site drawing reviews for something completely unrelated. We manage the upgrades and installation for a number of remote (i.e. isolated grid) power stations in Australia. Its come to my attention recently that some of the installations do not have any circuit breakers, rather that contactors of a similar continuous current rating have been used, and PLCs have been used to detect overcurrent situations and consequently open the contactor. Each station typically has 3 generators, each about 125kW capacity.
These installations have been in operation (apparently fault free) for a good 10 years. A quick assessment of the potential instantaneous fault current gives the indication that the contactor's withstand rating may be exceeded for multiple sets online at once, a situation I'm told is typical for some parts of the day.
I've looked at some of the relevant standards, and note that 'contactor' isn't specifically excluded from such use, though I note that 'automatic disconnection' is a requirement and don't believe that a contactor meets this requirement. (AS3000)
The other counter argument that I've been presented with is that the station is likely to stall rather than present a large (or even somewhat modest) fault current, a situation that I believe is quite likely, given that the alternators don't have field forcing fitted.
Nevertheless I'm of the belief that at the very least, suitable short circuit protection is a requirement, and that contactors don't meet this requirement. There are no coordinating fuses fitted either.
Comments?