How large a dip? 1% 5% 10% 20% 50%
Frequency dip means islanding or "National Situation"
A large frequency dip saturates transformer cores within tens of milliseconds. A 10% voltage dip can overload an asynchronous motor in five or ten minutes.
Most other loads are not very sensitive to voltage dips. Some electronic devices, VFDs are one case, may get a problem with either excessive ripple in DC supplies or alarms from grid supervision. Thyristor controlled devices will definitely be influenced because most of them expect either a 60 or 50 Hz supply with very small deviations.
Older switchers could kill themslves during beown-outs. The reason is that they were supposed to deliver a constant voltage at a constant load. Hence, they were taking constant power from grid. When voltage went down, current went up. Sometimes the current blew the rectifiers and the switch transistors. Modern supplies have input voltage supervision that switch off before destruction occurs. See
for an example.
The question is too broad, I think. What loads are you thinking about?
CBMA and other trade organizations have published charts on this kind of deviations. Mostly voltage dips. Can't remember that I've seen much on frequency dips.
Gunnar Englund
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Half full - Half empty? I don't mind. It's what in it that counts.