outofcontrol
Electrical
- Feb 4, 2003
- 2
Hi
I am currently doing brownfields work on offshore platforms in the oil and gas industry. Can anyone explain why I continually come across the use of shunt trips in critical systems isolation circuits ( eg ESD trip of power ), when an undervoltage trip coil is fail safe, eg if the wire falls off or the coil burns out the breaker trips. With a shunt trip you don't know it won't work until too late. Is there a reason for this ?
In marine rules for shipbuilding, DNV, Lloyds etc do not allow the use of shunt trips for this reason.
Thanks
I am currently doing brownfields work on offshore platforms in the oil and gas industry. Can anyone explain why I continually come across the use of shunt trips in critical systems isolation circuits ( eg ESD trip of power ), when an undervoltage trip coil is fail safe, eg if the wire falls off or the coil burns out the breaker trips. With a shunt trip you don't know it won't work until too late. Is there a reason for this ?
In marine rules for shipbuilding, DNV, Lloyds etc do not allow the use of shunt trips for this reason.
Thanks