JJHorak
Electrical
- Dec 19, 2000
- 68
I know you do not operate an SF6 breaker if gas pressure is low, but assume dead tank SF switch where there is at least a little positive pressure:
a) Is there a gas pressure level where there a risk of an internal line to ground fault?
b) If the breaker is open, is there a gas pressure where there is a risk of a flashover across open contacts?
If the pressure goes to 0, there is now a risk of air entering the tank. Again:
c) If there is a chance air has entered the tank, how large is the risk of an internal line to ground fault?
d) If there is a chance air has entered the tank, how large is the risk of flashover across open contacts?
Customer is reporting a 15kV SF6 padmount 5 way switch with very low gas pressure, and taking the switch out of service is going to be a major system disruption.
J.Horak
a) Is there a gas pressure level where there a risk of an internal line to ground fault?
b) If the breaker is open, is there a gas pressure where there is a risk of a flashover across open contacts?
If the pressure goes to 0, there is now a risk of air entering the tank. Again:
c) If there is a chance air has entered the tank, how large is the risk of an internal line to ground fault?
d) If there is a chance air has entered the tank, how large is the risk of flashover across open contacts?
Customer is reporting a 15kV SF6 padmount 5 way switch with very low gas pressure, and taking the switch out of service is going to be a major system disruption.
J.Horak