podobing
Electrical
- Jan 28, 2013
- 49
All,
I work for the Mining Industry. All of the three phase power that is delivered to the underground area of the mine is resistance grounded. The grounded side of the neutral grounding resistor (15 ampere limit) is connected to a safety ground bed that must be located 25 feet (minimum) away from the substation ground bed. The only other connection that I am accustomed to seeing at the safety ground bed is the ground conductor(s) of the cable(s) that go to the underground area of the coal mine. I believe that the idea of the 25 foot separation distance is to prevent lightning from possibly being directly coupled to the frames of all of the equipment that is used underground.
As you would expect, the other side of the neutral grounding resistor (NGR) is connected to the X0 bushing of the substation transformer.
Here comes the curve ball. One customer has installed three single phase voltage regulating transformers (auto-transformers) to the cable going underground The voltage regulators are connected in a wye configuration. I question where the neutral point of the voltage regulators is connected. It is currently connected to the safety ground bed. My question is: Where do I connect the neutral point of the voltage regulators? I feel that I have three choices: 1) The X0 of the supply transformer; 2) The safety ground bed; 3) Floating. I am leaning toward the X0 bushing. The system must still function as a resistance grounded system. It currently has 59G and 51G protection across the NGR.
Not that it matters, but just for your information: The mine supply voltage is 12470 VAC, and the transformer size is 10 MVA.
Try to Stay Warm.
Regards,
Podobing
I work for the Mining Industry. All of the three phase power that is delivered to the underground area of the mine is resistance grounded. The grounded side of the neutral grounding resistor (15 ampere limit) is connected to a safety ground bed that must be located 25 feet (minimum) away from the substation ground bed. The only other connection that I am accustomed to seeing at the safety ground bed is the ground conductor(s) of the cable(s) that go to the underground area of the coal mine. I believe that the idea of the 25 foot separation distance is to prevent lightning from possibly being directly coupled to the frames of all of the equipment that is used underground.
As you would expect, the other side of the neutral grounding resistor (NGR) is connected to the X0 bushing of the substation transformer.
Here comes the curve ball. One customer has installed three single phase voltage regulating transformers (auto-transformers) to the cable going underground The voltage regulators are connected in a wye configuration. I question where the neutral point of the voltage regulators is connected. It is currently connected to the safety ground bed. My question is: Where do I connect the neutral point of the voltage regulators? I feel that I have three choices: 1) The X0 of the supply transformer; 2) The safety ground bed; 3) Floating. I am leaning toward the X0 bushing. The system must still function as a resistance grounded system. It currently has 59G and 51G protection across the NGR.
Not that it matters, but just for your information: The mine supply voltage is 12470 VAC, and the transformer size is 10 MVA.
Try to Stay Warm.
Regards,
Podobing