ffllyyeerr
Electrical
- Apr 9, 2017
- 4
I am working on a grid tied, 200 KVA, 2400 V synchronous generator hydro powered (Pelton Wheel) currently inop with symptoms pointing to a failed static exciter which is to be verified shortly.
The generator is old without documentation. The field resistance measures 3.6 ohms through the brushes and slip rings. This has prompted the exciter manufacturer to indicate the present 100 Amp unit is oversized for the generator and has recommended replacing it with their now available 50 Amp unit. This makes sense to me as there has been ongoing brush/slip-ring arcing and other problems possibly due to overexcitation as there is no excitation limiter in the system. When online, excitation is controlled via a VAR/PF controller and the unit operates normally PF so as to maximize KW output.
The newer proposed 50 Amp replacement exciter comes with a different regulator that operates on reactive droop compensation.
Not sure about how this might work. One paper suggests droop compensation may not be appropriate for a small generator due to over/under excitation when it attempts to follow abnormal grid voltage variations. Changing to droop compensation also involves adding another special built CT due to the voltage level and the 30 VA burden. From a limited understanding of droop compensation it appears to follow a straight line relationship between terminal voltage and reactive power - difficult to see how this is going to maximize KW output.
Looks like a fork in the road here - which way to go? Any help would be appreciated.
The generator is old without documentation. The field resistance measures 3.6 ohms through the brushes and slip rings. This has prompted the exciter manufacturer to indicate the present 100 Amp unit is oversized for the generator and has recommended replacing it with their now available 50 Amp unit. This makes sense to me as there has been ongoing brush/slip-ring arcing and other problems possibly due to overexcitation as there is no excitation limiter in the system. When online, excitation is controlled via a VAR/PF controller and the unit operates normally PF so as to maximize KW output.
The newer proposed 50 Amp replacement exciter comes with a different regulator that operates on reactive droop compensation.
Not sure about how this might work. One paper suggests droop compensation may not be appropriate for a small generator due to over/under excitation when it attempts to follow abnormal grid voltage variations. Changing to droop compensation also involves adding another special built CT due to the voltage level and the 30 VA burden. From a limited understanding of droop compensation it appears to follow a straight line relationship between terminal voltage and reactive power - difficult to see how this is going to maximize KW output.
Looks like a fork in the road here - which way to go? Any help would be appreciated.