powerwagon75
Electrical
- Mar 6, 2005
- 36
Greetings all experts,
We have a customer who has an issue with one of the back up power systems at their site. This is a 480V 2MW genset and closed/soft transition transfer switch. Switch has the utility-side service breaker integral to the transfer switch cabinet. (MasterPact with a STR-38 trip unit)
Problem is when attempting to crank the genset, the utility service breaker trips at moment of starter disengagement. But, doesn't do it every time. All protective functions associated with the parallel transfer controls were isolated, leaving only the STR unit. Turning the GF settings to their highest points, helped, by allowing about 15-16 crank attempts, as opposed to the 2-3 it took to trip it at the normal settings.
Customer had the STR unit go bad about two years ago, and had it replaced.
Background: Issue arose when the customer thought the starters (dual starters) on the genset went bad because they weren't engaging, but just spinning. When our tech arrived, he found the customer had removed one starter. It checked out, and was reinstalled. Wiring stake-on connectors were flaky, and were replaced. Wiring verified against sister-units. It appears that perhaps the customer "zapped" the B+ pretty hard to ground at some point, maybe not realizing they needed to disconnect more than one ground lead with series-parallel batteries.
Genset uses two "safety relays", mounted on each starter main solenoid, that are operated through the "safety control." ( a box that senses the output terminal of each starter, and disengages both and re-trys, if both don't fully engage simultaneously.)
Does anyone see where an obvious problem would be? System has been in use since 2000. Unfortunately, every generator system on the site is different, so this is the only transfer/breaker set up like this.
Could a DC short have caused the GF sensing to go bad? I don't really see it--fault should have been local to the genset, at B+ to point of fault via a tool.
Would applying flyback diodes across the solenoids, and perhaps even the starter + terminal be overkill/ necessary? Customer doesn't want to believe the STR unit is bad again--and due to production concerns wouldn't let a breaker tech test it until their next shutdown.
Any thoughts are greatly appreciated
eric
We have a customer who has an issue with one of the back up power systems at their site. This is a 480V 2MW genset and closed/soft transition transfer switch. Switch has the utility-side service breaker integral to the transfer switch cabinet. (MasterPact with a STR-38 trip unit)
Problem is when attempting to crank the genset, the utility service breaker trips at moment of starter disengagement. But, doesn't do it every time. All protective functions associated with the parallel transfer controls were isolated, leaving only the STR unit. Turning the GF settings to their highest points, helped, by allowing about 15-16 crank attempts, as opposed to the 2-3 it took to trip it at the normal settings.
Customer had the STR unit go bad about two years ago, and had it replaced.
Background: Issue arose when the customer thought the starters (dual starters) on the genset went bad because they weren't engaging, but just spinning. When our tech arrived, he found the customer had removed one starter. It checked out, and was reinstalled. Wiring stake-on connectors were flaky, and were replaced. Wiring verified against sister-units. It appears that perhaps the customer "zapped" the B+ pretty hard to ground at some point, maybe not realizing they needed to disconnect more than one ground lead with series-parallel batteries.
Genset uses two "safety relays", mounted on each starter main solenoid, that are operated through the "safety control." ( a box that senses the output terminal of each starter, and disengages both and re-trys, if both don't fully engage simultaneously.)
Does anyone see where an obvious problem would be? System has been in use since 2000. Unfortunately, every generator system on the site is different, so this is the only transfer/breaker set up like this.
Could a DC short have caused the GF sensing to go bad? I don't really see it--fault should have been local to the genset, at B+ to point of fault via a tool.
Would applying flyback diodes across the solenoids, and perhaps even the starter + terminal be overkill/ necessary? Customer doesn't want to believe the STR unit is bad again--and due to production concerns wouldn't let a breaker tech test it until their next shutdown.
Any thoughts are greatly appreciated
eric