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Question for short-circuit study experts

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JPGQC

Electrical
Joined
Aug 20, 2008
Messages
12
Location
CA
Hi guys!

Here is a question for short-circuit study experts.

A small plant is fed by a 750 kVA, Yg-Yg transformer. The utility wont give X/R ratios.

IEEE std C37-010 gives a typical ratio of around 7 for that transformer.

Given that X1/R1 ratio, is there a way to estimate the X0/R0 ratio?
 
First, thank you for your quick reply.

Someone here told me the exact same thing but he wasnt able to tell me where it was from.

Is it form any standard?

Thanks again
 
General empirical data. Conrad St. Pierre's Short-Circuit book is a good source for such things.
 
Hope you were referring to transformer X0/R0 ratio.For smaller 3 phase units, 85 % of positive impedance is right as David pointed out. But if the unit is formed from single phase units or the transformer is a 5 limbed core unit( which will be the case with large 3 phase units say above 150 MVA)X0 will be same as X1.
 
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