crumble
Electrical
- Feb 27, 2003
- 2
I was reading through this old thread trying to find an answer to my question.
I work a protection engineer and I'm doing a bit of reading into the merits of Neutral Voltage Displacement (NVD) or Residual Voltage Protection being based on either numerically derived 3V0 or via a Broken Delta connection.
The system to which I'm applying NVD is a normally resistively earthed network but with the possibility of being back-livened via a delta winding of transformer in contingent situations. The NVD is there to detect and trip.
Ferroresonance can be an issue so loading the 'broken-delta' connection helps. But equally an auxiliary VT with a broken delta can assist here.
Any comment to why a 'broken delta' connection could be superior to numerically derived 3V0?
Regards,
Chris
I work a protection engineer and I'm doing a bit of reading into the merits of Neutral Voltage Displacement (NVD) or Residual Voltage Protection being based on either numerically derived 3V0 or via a Broken Delta connection.
The system to which I'm applying NVD is a normally resistively earthed network but with the possibility of being back-livened via a delta winding of transformer in contingent situations. The NVD is there to detect and trip.
Ferroresonance can be an issue so loading the 'broken-delta' connection helps. But equally an auxiliary VT with a broken delta can assist here.
Any comment to why a 'broken delta' connection could be superior to numerically derived 3V0?
Regards,
Chris