alehman
Electrical
- May 23, 1999
- 2,624
Getting back to the subject of blown fuse protection (thread238-175697), one of my clients has experienced a few cases where an automatic transfer switch (custom built breaker transfer-pairs) begin cycling after a transformer primary fuse opens. These cases all involve pad-mount medium voltage to 480V utility-owned transformers supplying the normal source input of the breaker pair ATS.
An article on the Basler web site discusses the phenomenon where wye-wye 5-leg shell-form transformers regenerate voltage on open phases, particularly when there is no load applied. I suspect many pad-mount transformers are of this construction. This would explain the confused ATS's.
The ATS's typically utilize a 47/27 relay, connected through open-delta PT's, for sensing on the utility source.
Possible solutions I see are to add some load upstream of the ATS, so the transformer always has some load, or replace the transformer with delta-wye (may not be an option). The Basler article mentions a "small" load, but how small is small?
Has anyone dealt with this situation or have any other suggestions to deal with this regenerated no-load voltage?
An article on the Basler web site discusses the phenomenon where wye-wye 5-leg shell-form transformers regenerate voltage on open phases, particularly when there is no load applied. I suspect many pad-mount transformers are of this construction. This would explain the confused ATS's.
The ATS's typically utilize a 47/27 relay, connected through open-delta PT's, for sensing on the utility source.
Possible solutions I see are to add some load upstream of the ATS, so the transformer always has some load, or replace the transformer with delta-wye (may not be an option). The Basler article mentions a "small" load, but how small is small?
Has anyone dealt with this situation or have any other suggestions to deal with this regenerated no-load voltage?