FEinTX
Electrical
- Jul 26, 2006
- 25
Hello,
We are receiving a new substation at a wind farm equipped with capacitor banks. At a previous job, they used Joslyn zero voltage switches to engage the cap banks and during final testing a digital O-scope was used to confirm the timing was correct. 2 of the 6 switches had to be recalibrated as a result of this testing as there were significant voltage spikes.
I am at a new site now and they are using a different method. They have Southern States pre-insertion closing resistor switches which use a resistor as a shunt to limit spikes. I am new to this type device, and they are telling me there is no need to capture closing waveforms as this is a very simple design unlike the zero-voltage switches from Joslyn.
Question: Am I being fed a line? Seems to me you'd still need to verify the resistor is engaging prior to the switch closing and providing a smooth transition. Any thoughts are greatly appreciated.
FEinTX
We are receiving a new substation at a wind farm equipped with capacitor banks. At a previous job, they used Joslyn zero voltage switches to engage the cap banks and during final testing a digital O-scope was used to confirm the timing was correct. 2 of the 6 switches had to be recalibrated as a result of this testing as there were significant voltage spikes.
I am at a new site now and they are using a different method. They have Southern States pre-insertion closing resistor switches which use a resistor as a shunt to limit spikes. I am new to this type device, and they are telling me there is no need to capture closing waveforms as this is a very simple design unlike the zero-voltage switches from Joslyn.
Question: Am I being fed a line? Seems to me you'd still need to verify the resistor is engaging prior to the switch closing and providing a smooth transition. Any thoughts are greatly appreciated.
FEinTX