rhatcher
Electrical
- Jan 17, 2001
- 636
Can anyone tell me how to determine the magnetizing kVARs for a transformer? Is there a general value that can be used for estimating purposes based on kVA capacity? The known values of the transformers in question are primary and secondary voltage, rated kVA, and percent impedance.
In order to help understand the nature of my question, my facility has about 9.5MVA of distribution in the form of eight transformers with 13.2kV primaries and various low voltage secondaries. I am in the process of determining our actual power usage, but I am estimating that it is in the range of 350-500kVA continuous with a peak of 1000kVA and a power factor of 80-90%. The difference in usage versus capacity is due to the fact that the building's original purpose required much more power than we do.
The problem is that our power factor as seen by the utility is very low and it is costing us a lot of money in penalties. Since the utility metering is on the primary side, I suspect that the reason for this is that we have so much idle transformer capacity. However, I need to put a number on it. If I can determine the magnetizing kVARS for a given transformer or for a given amount of kVA capacity, I can estimate how much all of that idle transformer capacity is costing and decide if it is worth it to do something about it. Right now, I could eliminate 3 transformers (4250kVA) and de-energize 2 more (2250kVA) if I transfered some loads to the remaining 3 transformers.
In order to help understand the nature of my question, my facility has about 9.5MVA of distribution in the form of eight transformers with 13.2kV primaries and various low voltage secondaries. I am in the process of determining our actual power usage, but I am estimating that it is in the range of 350-500kVA continuous with a peak of 1000kVA and a power factor of 80-90%. The difference in usage versus capacity is due to the fact that the building's original purpose required much more power than we do.
The problem is that our power factor as seen by the utility is very low and it is costing us a lot of money in penalties. Since the utility metering is on the primary side, I suspect that the reason for this is that we have so much idle transformer capacity. However, I need to put a number on it. If I can determine the magnetizing kVARS for a given transformer or for a given amount of kVA capacity, I can estimate how much all of that idle transformer capacity is costing and decide if it is worth it to do something about it. Right now, I could eliminate 3 transformers (4250kVA) and de-energize 2 more (2250kVA) if I transfered some loads to the remaining 3 transformers.