luffy2011
Electrical
- Sep 15, 2011
- 42
Hi Guys,
I’d like to know if any of you have a similar experience and kindly give your analysis on this situation: High impedance relay for bus protection (SEL 587Z) trips during switching of load on one particular feeder only.
Details:
> In steady-state, the relay impedance element reading is 87A=8, 87B=0, 87C=8. Other substations with similar setup measures 87A=87B=87C=0.
> As mentioned, tripping occurs only during feeder load switching with values of 87A & 87C = around 80 V, while 87B = 0. Trip setting is 68 V.
> CTs used have the same specifications. Also, another substation has the same setup with no recorded problem for the past two years.
> Power transformer was already energized prior to loading of that particular feeder.
> No problem switching adjacent feeders of the same substation.
> The same feeder line was transferred/bypassed to adjacent feeder – no tripping.
> Relay event records show that relatively high differential currents are only transient in nature (about a second). A small differential current values are measured at steady-state but not enough to cause a trip.
Please don’t hesitate to ask for additional details...
Basically, we already have an initial assessment and action plans. However, I would appreciate if any can give their analysis or share a similar experience.
Thanks!
I’d like to know if any of you have a similar experience and kindly give your analysis on this situation: High impedance relay for bus protection (SEL 587Z) trips during switching of load on one particular feeder only.
Details:
> In steady-state, the relay impedance element reading is 87A=8, 87B=0, 87C=8. Other substations with similar setup measures 87A=87B=87C=0.
> As mentioned, tripping occurs only during feeder load switching with values of 87A & 87C = around 80 V, while 87B = 0. Trip setting is 68 V.
> CTs used have the same specifications. Also, another substation has the same setup with no recorded problem for the past two years.
> Power transformer was already energized prior to loading of that particular feeder.
> No problem switching adjacent feeders of the same substation.
> The same feeder line was transferred/bypassed to adjacent feeder – no tripping.
> Relay event records show that relatively high differential currents are only transient in nature (about a second). A small differential current values are measured at steady-state but not enough to cause a trip.
Please don’t hesitate to ask for additional details...
Basically, we already have an initial assessment and action plans. However, I would appreciate if any can give their analysis or share a similar experience.
Thanks!