rockman7892
Electrical
- Apr 7, 2008
- 1,165
I'm looking at an application where a site has (2) 34.5kV OH utility services coming into a 35kV M-T-M switchgear lineup which has a feeder on each side to feed a 35kv-5kV 20MVA transformer. The existing switchgear with the (2) feeds has become obsolete so customer is looking to have new lineup to feed transformers and keep existing lineup as a backup.
One of the options being kicked around is extending the (2) 35kV services to a new M-T-M switchgear and using the new switchgear as the primary means to feed existing transformers. For redundancy sake the customer wishes to keep existing switchgear as a redundant backup to still be able to power transformers with new switchgear out of service. The proposed means to do this is to install a new MTS at the primary of each transformer to reconnect existing transformer feed from existing switchgear as well as feed from new switchgear. (Another option here was to remove MTS and just connect feeds from each switchgear lineup to transformer primary with breaker interlocks. I don't see this as common having two different feeders to transformer primary)
A new MTS presents some challenges with physical space and trying to re-sue existing feeders as well as the fact that this concept still will utilize an aging and almost obsolete lineup as a redundant backup.
In my opinion the better approach here would be to build the new switchgear to have the same reliability and redundancy as the approach above would provide. One thought I had based off a past project was to make the new switchgear lineup a double-bus / double-breaker lineup to give a high degree of reliability. My main question is how much reliability is gained with the double-bus / double-breaker vs a standard M-T-M when it comes to cost? Also when looking at the application here with having (2) M-T-M lineups with one being almost obsolete does a new double-bus / double breaker make sense?
Appreciate any perspective on this.
One of the options being kicked around is extending the (2) 35kV services to a new M-T-M switchgear and using the new switchgear as the primary means to feed existing transformers. For redundancy sake the customer wishes to keep existing switchgear as a redundant backup to still be able to power transformers with new switchgear out of service. The proposed means to do this is to install a new MTS at the primary of each transformer to reconnect existing transformer feed from existing switchgear as well as feed from new switchgear. (Another option here was to remove MTS and just connect feeds from each switchgear lineup to transformer primary with breaker interlocks. I don't see this as common having two different feeders to transformer primary)
A new MTS presents some challenges with physical space and trying to re-sue existing feeders as well as the fact that this concept still will utilize an aging and almost obsolete lineup as a redundant backup.
In my opinion the better approach here would be to build the new switchgear to have the same reliability and redundancy as the approach above would provide. One thought I had based off a past project was to make the new switchgear lineup a double-bus / double-breaker lineup to give a high degree of reliability. My main question is how much reliability is gained with the double-bus / double-breaker vs a standard M-T-M when it comes to cost? Also when looking at the application here with having (2) M-T-M lineups with one being almost obsolete does a new double-bus / double breaker make sense?
Appreciate any perspective on this.