antonino
Electrical
- Mar 15, 2004
- 11
hi
for a local hydroelectric facility, we have supplied several on-line inverters (15kva, 277) for emergency lighting. Four years after the start-up, the real 125V dc load has reached a value greater than the design and the problem is that these inverters are feeded by the 125vdc substation control voltage. Actually, this 125 vdc is splited in two systems(A,B, each one with BC and batteries) with a tie breaker, but the tie breaker can not be closed (if required) at this dc load current level without overloading one of the battery chargers.
After several meetings, the tech comitee have proposed
to change the operation mode of inverters from on-line to off-line in order to reduce the dc current load.
Any suggestions on why this is not best solution. References or standards to support it are appreciated.
By the way, all the lamps are HID.
thanks
for a local hydroelectric facility, we have supplied several on-line inverters (15kva, 277) for emergency lighting. Four years after the start-up, the real 125V dc load has reached a value greater than the design and the problem is that these inverters are feeded by the 125vdc substation control voltage. Actually, this 125 vdc is splited in two systems(A,B, each one with BC and batteries) with a tie breaker, but the tie breaker can not be closed (if required) at this dc load current level without overloading one of the battery chargers.
After several meetings, the tech comitee have proposed
to change the operation mode of inverters from on-line to off-line in order to reduce the dc current load.
Any suggestions on why this is not best solution. References or standards to support it are appreciated.
By the way, all the lamps are HID.
thanks