eamonkerrigan
Electrical
- Jan 5, 2007
- 17
Hello,
I'm new to the forum and I think I have an easy question to start out with.
I can usually take my questions straight to the horses mouth but in this case I am working on a project in Saudi Arabia and communicating back and forth doesn't seem to work too well.
I'm working on an AC interference study on a proposed pipeline. My induced steady state voltages are dependent on the load current from the nearby transmission line. The data I was given is that the "load current" equals zero and the "line power carrying capacity" equals 200 MVA.
I have ignored the load current thing and calculated the current myself from the MVA rating.
200 MVA = 1,000 Amps (115 kV power line)
I just don't know if I'm out of line here. Where does this zero load current come from? Is it unreasonable to use this 200 MVA to calculate line load?
I was also given X and R values (R = 0.0244 X=0.0352) but I thought this would only concern short circuit scenarios.
I appreciate all your help. Thanks
I'm new to the forum and I think I have an easy question to start out with.
I can usually take my questions straight to the horses mouth but in this case I am working on a project in Saudi Arabia and communicating back and forth doesn't seem to work too well.
I'm working on an AC interference study on a proposed pipeline. My induced steady state voltages are dependent on the load current from the nearby transmission line. The data I was given is that the "load current" equals zero and the "line power carrying capacity" equals 200 MVA.
I have ignored the load current thing and calculated the current myself from the MVA rating.
200 MVA = 1,000 Amps (115 kV power line)
I just don't know if I'm out of line here. Where does this zero load current come from? Is it unreasonable to use this 200 MVA to calculate line load?
I was also given X and R values (R = 0.0244 X=0.0352) but I thought this would only concern short circuit scenarios.
I appreciate all your help. Thanks