Adam1980
Electrical
- Feb 17, 2012
- 87
Dear all,
all manufacturers has a certain upper limit or maximum rating for the circuit breakers that they manufacturem, i.e. feeder rating. For example some manufacturer would have for 33 kV rated breakers a maximum current rating of 2500 A. In other words if I am to serve a load from a transfomrer with 33 kV at the LV side the maximum rating of the transfomer should be sqrt(3) x 2500 x 33 = 145 MVA.
If i am to use a larger transfomer lets say 200 MVA i would need to install two breakers in parallel since there is no one breaker at the 33 kV level that can take around 3500 A. In this case i came to know that this configuration is problametic and it is recommended to avoid due to possible issues with synchronized openning and so on.
I would like to benefit form your experience concerning this topic and whether this is, i.e. parallerl breakers, an industry normal practice and what are the possible problems and limitations of such a configuration.
Thank you.
Adam
all manufacturers has a certain upper limit or maximum rating for the circuit breakers that they manufacturem, i.e. feeder rating. For example some manufacturer would have for 33 kV rated breakers a maximum current rating of 2500 A. In other words if I am to serve a load from a transfomrer with 33 kV at the LV side the maximum rating of the transfomer should be sqrt(3) x 2500 x 33 = 145 MVA.
If i am to use a larger transfomer lets say 200 MVA i would need to install two breakers in parallel since there is no one breaker at the 33 kV level that can take around 3500 A. In this case i came to know that this configuration is problametic and it is recommended to avoid due to possible issues with synchronized openning and so on.
I would like to benefit form your experience concerning this topic and whether this is, i.e. parallerl breakers, an industry normal practice and what are the possible problems and limitations of such a configuration.
Thank you.
Adam