electrickiwi
Electrical
- Aug 14, 2012
- 14
I have a 3-ph synchronous generator, 500 kW 415 V, feeding directly onto a (weak) grid through a standard 800 kVA, 415/11 kV distribution transformer (Delta HV, solidly grounded Star LV) via a contactor and circuit breaker. The system is new and from first synchronisation, current on phase L1 is 80 to 100 A lower than the other two (this is with output between 60 and 250 kW). See attached waveform. Protection relay trips on 50Q (negative phase seq overcurrent).
No significant voltage imbalance, either on or off-load, and everything looks to be in phase. I only have access to LV measurements.
The only other time I've seen something similar has been due to a transformer phase fault on the HV side (blown fuse I think), and because of the Delta-Star winding everything looked fine on LV until it came under load. I need to prove the cause of the fault here though, because it may not be the same.
Is there anything I can tell from protection relay event captures (see screenshots attached) or by simple on-site tests that would confirm the most likely cause? The transformer belongs to the distribution network operator and it's remote so not much option for direct investigation there at short notice.
My next step will be to bolt a 3-phase short between generator and transformer, then manually excite the generator to 300-400 A and see if the problem persists. That should isolate whether it's a generator-side (my problem) or transformer-side (not my problem) fault... Anything simpler that might narrow things down??
I'd appreciate any troubleshooting help on this one. Cheers.
No significant voltage imbalance, either on or off-load, and everything looks to be in phase. I only have access to LV measurements.
The only other time I've seen something similar has been due to a transformer phase fault on the HV side (blown fuse I think), and because of the Delta-Star winding everything looked fine on LV until it came under load. I need to prove the cause of the fault here though, because it may not be the same.
Is there anything I can tell from protection relay event captures (see screenshots attached) or by simple on-site tests that would confirm the most likely cause? The transformer belongs to the distribution network operator and it's remote so not much option for direct investigation there at short notice.
My next step will be to bolt a 3-phase short between generator and transformer, then manually excite the generator to 300-400 A and see if the problem persists. That should isolate whether it's a generator-side (my problem) or transformer-side (not my problem) fault... Anything simpler that might narrow things down??
I'd appreciate any troubleshooting help on this one. Cheers.