PowerfulStuff
Electrical
- Mar 13, 2005
- 59
Hi,
I've just been through a 'black start' on a 100MW islanded power station after boiler feed water was contaminated with mud! Anyway the power is back on but I had a few quick ones to see of anyone else has seen them before-
1/ During energisation of a new generator step up transformer the MWTU reverse power relay tripped repeatedly when excitation was applied to the generator (i.e. before the secondary circuit breaker was closed). I swapped the relay out but it has since tested OK. Is there any testing on a new transformer that would lead to excessive core magnetisation and hence an inrush current high enough to cause a false trip on the relay. The manual shows insensitivity up to 20 times rated current.
2/ One of the diesel generators has a 'series boost unit' in the controller which we diagnosed as having failed, replaced it and all OK. It's an inductor/capacitor unit which appears to provide field boost depending on load current based on how it is wired up -AC field supply goes through and one phase CT connected. It is wired before the field controller. It is 30 years old and (funnily enough) there are no manuals. Anyone got any thoughts about what it might do beyond my guesses?
Thanks,
Martin
I've just been through a 'black start' on a 100MW islanded power station after boiler feed water was contaminated with mud! Anyway the power is back on but I had a few quick ones to see of anyone else has seen them before-
1/ During energisation of a new generator step up transformer the MWTU reverse power relay tripped repeatedly when excitation was applied to the generator (i.e. before the secondary circuit breaker was closed). I swapped the relay out but it has since tested OK. Is there any testing on a new transformer that would lead to excessive core magnetisation and hence an inrush current high enough to cause a false trip on the relay. The manual shows insensitivity up to 20 times rated current.
2/ One of the diesel generators has a 'series boost unit' in the controller which we diagnosed as having failed, replaced it and all OK. It's an inductor/capacitor unit which appears to provide field boost depending on load current based on how it is wired up -AC field supply goes through and one phase CT connected. It is wired before the field controller. It is 30 years old and (funnily enough) there are no manuals. Anyone got any thoughts about what it might do beyond my guesses?
Thanks,
Martin