distributionPlanner
Electrical
- May 18, 2014
- 9
Are there any distribution protection engineers who consider the conductor damage curve when deciding on the number of reclose attempts?
It seems fairly common to compare the timed-overcurrent curves with the conductor damage curve.
However, if there are reclosing attempts, the conductor will heat up during the first operation, trip and cool down during the open interval, then heat up again on the reclose onto a fault.
The timed overcurrent curve may be below the conductor damage curve for 1 individual operation, but with successive operations, the *combined* exposure to fault current and duration could be above the conductor damage curve.
(In other words, multiply the timed overcurrent curve with the # of operations to lockout and compare this curve against the conductor damage curve)
Does anyone consider this?
It seems fairly common to compare the timed-overcurrent curves with the conductor damage curve.
However, if there are reclosing attempts, the conductor will heat up during the first operation, trip and cool down during the open interval, then heat up again on the reclose onto a fault.
The timed overcurrent curve may be below the conductor damage curve for 1 individual operation, but with successive operations, the *combined* exposure to fault current and duration could be above the conductor damage curve.
(In other words, multiply the timed overcurrent curve with the # of operations to lockout and compare this curve against the conductor damage curve)
Does anyone consider this?