trat1208
Electrical
- Jan 22, 2009
- 15
Hi all,
I am designing a project and am coming across some frustration dealing with interposing relay contact ratings. Any help would be appreciated.
Problem 1. I have a 4kv switchgear breaker I am replacing the relaying on. Due to some design considerations, I need to use interposing relays in the trip & close circuits for user-initiated / manual breaker operations (protective relays will be tripping breaker directly). My nameplate trip coil amps are 15.5A @ 48Vdc and nameplate close circuit amps are 3.6A @ 240Vac. Finding a plug-in relay with a 3.6A @ 240Vac contact rating for the close is pretty easy (Potter-Brumfield KRPA or KUEP). I am having difficulty finding a relay rated for 15.5A @ 48Vdc. In the past, I probably would've just thrown in a KUEP because I've seen these used often in the past for breaker trip/close SCADA interposing relay applications, but I was surprised to see the 10A rating when I looked it up and am questioning whether it is appropriate. The need for a 15.5A or greater contract rating does seem a little hokey to me though, since the relay will make and carry this current for about all of about 0.1sec and the 52a contact will break the circuit when the breaker opens. The KUEP datasheet doesn't give any guidance as far as momentary ratings though. Does anyone have any experience with spec'ing interposing relays like this, or can suggest a particular relay that would satisfy my application?
Problem 2. Another somewhat related aux relay question. Manufacturers specify a min recommended contact load rating in their relay datasheets. I understand the basis for this rating, wetting / breaking the film off the contact to get a good electrical connection when the contact makes. But this is usually specified at a very low voltage, i.e. 300ma @ 5Vdc or 12Vac, etc. Should I be extrapolating this (based off calculated VA?) to determine what I would need at a higher voltage like 48Vdc? Or else is there a voltage level where the min contact load rating is no longer relevant? These ratings seem difficult to deal with for applications where you want to use a contact to pick up a relay digital input that only draws <10mA (SEL relay). Again, I haven't had issue with this in the past and would just use any old plug-in relay, but unfortunately I can't unsee the datasheets I looked at the other day and this is bothering me.
Thanks in advance for any help. Was also planning to call the manufacturer tomorrow, but was wondering what people might have to say from their experiences.
I am designing a project and am coming across some frustration dealing with interposing relay contact ratings. Any help would be appreciated.
Problem 1. I have a 4kv switchgear breaker I am replacing the relaying on. Due to some design considerations, I need to use interposing relays in the trip & close circuits for user-initiated / manual breaker operations (protective relays will be tripping breaker directly). My nameplate trip coil amps are 15.5A @ 48Vdc and nameplate close circuit amps are 3.6A @ 240Vac. Finding a plug-in relay with a 3.6A @ 240Vac contact rating for the close is pretty easy (Potter-Brumfield KRPA or KUEP). I am having difficulty finding a relay rated for 15.5A @ 48Vdc. In the past, I probably would've just thrown in a KUEP because I've seen these used often in the past for breaker trip/close SCADA interposing relay applications, but I was surprised to see the 10A rating when I looked it up and am questioning whether it is appropriate. The need for a 15.5A or greater contract rating does seem a little hokey to me though, since the relay will make and carry this current for about all of about 0.1sec and the 52a contact will break the circuit when the breaker opens. The KUEP datasheet doesn't give any guidance as far as momentary ratings though. Does anyone have any experience with spec'ing interposing relays like this, or can suggest a particular relay that would satisfy my application?
Problem 2. Another somewhat related aux relay question. Manufacturers specify a min recommended contact load rating in their relay datasheets. I understand the basis for this rating, wetting / breaking the film off the contact to get a good electrical connection when the contact makes. But this is usually specified at a very low voltage, i.e. 300ma @ 5Vdc or 12Vac, etc. Should I be extrapolating this (based off calculated VA?) to determine what I would need at a higher voltage like 48Vdc? Or else is there a voltage level where the min contact load rating is no longer relevant? These ratings seem difficult to deal with for applications where you want to use a contact to pick up a relay digital input that only draws <10mA (SEL relay). Again, I haven't had issue with this in the past and would just use any old plug-in relay, but unfortunately I can't unsee the datasheets I looked at the other day and this is bothering me.
Thanks in advance for any help. Was also planning to call the manufacturer tomorrow, but was wondering what people might have to say from their experiences.