Jackson1
Electrical
- Jul 29, 2003
- 7
I worked for the Southern Company at one of the southeastern utilities (now retired). I was in charge of their Transformer test department. I believe that we were getting some sort of ferroresonant condition at times...while we were doing an excitation test. I worked in this department for over 20 years and can recall three transformers that seemed to go into resonance. Most every time this happened, some of our equiptment was severly damaged. Let me give you a little background. The first piece of equiptment was a 560 amp 3 phase circuit breaker, then a 0 - 13 KV step voltage regulator (9000 KVA), then a 11 /44 KV step up transformer (5000 KVA), then to a HV voltage and current metering section and finally to the transformer under test. I had full control of each one these in the control room. Whenever one of these transformers went into resonance it was an all of a sudden thing without any warning. We even had a voltage transient study run. The study showed the possibility of voltages above the the insulation level of the sensors. The HV sensors seemed to be the weak point in the chain of equiptment. We were in the process of putting some overvoltage protection in the chain between the step-up transformer and and the metering section. My question is, does anyone know of any other protection that could be added or any way to predict this happening. Thanks for your replys, Jack B.
P.S. - The step voltage regulator could be run from 0 volts up to approximately 6200 volts. The system was de-energized and the regulator was manually changed to 6000 volts to 13000 volts. All of these resonant conditions occured when engizing the regulator at 6000 volts.
P.S. - The step voltage regulator could be run from 0 volts up to approximately 6200 volts. The system was de-energized and the regulator was manually changed to 6000 volts to 13000 volts. All of these resonant conditions occured when engizing the regulator at 6000 volts.