Stirrick
Electrical
- Jun 9, 2015
- 1
I've been reading up on electrical supplies for Traction systems (Railway networks), but am really struggling to clarify one major point.
The Grid supply to a Traction Sub-station comprises 2 x Phase conductors (the actual Phases used being rotated over the entire rail network to iron-out load imbalances).
But I can't find a definitive statement as to why 2 x Phases are used, rather than a single Phase-Neutral connection.
The Traction (LV) supply from the Sub-station is a single Phase-Neutral quantity. So it would seem simpler to repeat this on the Grid (HV) supply side.
The only arguments I've found, so far, are that: (1) using 2 Phase conductors increases the Power delivered by 41% compared to 1 x Phase-Neutral, (2) using 2 Phase conductors reduces the load imbalance on the Grid side, and (3) using 2 Phase quantities helps maintain constant power in the system. But mainly the point just seems to get glossed over. Which makes me suspect that the reason is not particularly well understood.
Any ideas ?
The Grid supply to a Traction Sub-station comprises 2 x Phase conductors (the actual Phases used being rotated over the entire rail network to iron-out load imbalances).
But I can't find a definitive statement as to why 2 x Phases are used, rather than a single Phase-Neutral connection.
The Traction (LV) supply from the Sub-station is a single Phase-Neutral quantity. So it would seem simpler to repeat this on the Grid (HV) supply side.
The only arguments I've found, so far, are that: (1) using 2 Phase conductors increases the Power delivered by 41% compared to 1 x Phase-Neutral, (2) using 2 Phase conductors reduces the load imbalance on the Grid side, and (3) using 2 Phase quantities helps maintain constant power in the system. But mainly the point just seems to get glossed over. Which makes me suspect that the reason is not particularly well understood.
Any ideas ?