MAnton
Electrical
- Apr 24, 2013
- 5
Assume a substation with one transmission source and one collector feeder. The transmission source has shield wires which are connected on both ends, and the collector system is UG, but also connected to the substation ground grid.
I am attempting to accurately calculate and understand the amount of fault current that will flow on the shield wire return path to the source substation, and am having trouble with what my "Central Site" ground impedance should be in the CDEGS FCDIST calculation.
Connecting the substation to the collector system grounds is necessary for safety, but I am wondering about how it effects the FCDIST calculation. Including the collector system ground network reduces the grid resistance significantly because of all of the additional buried conductor, but if I include this reduction in grid resistance to my model then the amount of current flowing on the shield wire is reduced (increasing the amount of current flowing to earth through my substation & collector ground grid).
The CDEGS Technical seminar reading guide (I attended this year) says to use "the ground resistance of the substation (when disconnected from the distribution circuit)" . . . but I am still not 100% sure what to do or what the physics/logic is behind that.
It seems that connecting to a large underground collector network that lowers the effective resistance of my substation grid should most certainly affect the amount of fault current flowing back to the source on the shield wire, but the above statement from the tech. seminar guide seems to suggest it doesn't?
Any help or thoughts here?
I am attempting to accurately calculate and understand the amount of fault current that will flow on the shield wire return path to the source substation, and am having trouble with what my "Central Site" ground impedance should be in the CDEGS FCDIST calculation.
Connecting the substation to the collector system grounds is necessary for safety, but I am wondering about how it effects the FCDIST calculation. Including the collector system ground network reduces the grid resistance significantly because of all of the additional buried conductor, but if I include this reduction in grid resistance to my model then the amount of current flowing on the shield wire is reduced (increasing the amount of current flowing to earth through my substation & collector ground grid).
The CDEGS Technical seminar reading guide (I attended this year) says to use "the ground resistance of the substation (when disconnected from the distribution circuit)" . . . but I am still not 100% sure what to do or what the physics/logic is behind that.
It seems that connecting to a large underground collector network that lowers the effective resistance of my substation grid should most certainly affect the amount of fault current flowing back to the source on the shield wire, but the above statement from the tech. seminar guide seems to suggest it doesn't?
Any help or thoughts here?