keesem
Electrical
- Jul 25, 2013
- 1
Hi,
I'm trying to define the maximum length of overhead lines based on it's characteristics (R,X,max current, max power) and voltage level (high voltage).
So basically, I want to know what's the maximal length of 10, 20, 35, 110, 220, 400 kV line that is acceptable due to voltage drops and other factors.
I found on Wikipedia this: "Very approximately, the allowable product of line length and maximum load is proportional to the square of the system voltage" - ( - Capacity heading).
So, if I have a 110kV line with a max load of 122 MVA, it turns that the "allowable" lenght is 99.18. but wikipedia doesn't mention if it's miles or kilometers.
Is this formula applicable for my issue? Is it correct? Is it for miles of kilometers?
Is there another way to calculate this?
Thanks in advance,
keesem
I'm trying to define the maximum length of overhead lines based on it's characteristics (R,X,max current, max power) and voltage level (high voltage).
So basically, I want to know what's the maximal length of 10, 20, 35, 110, 220, 400 kV line that is acceptable due to voltage drops and other factors.
I found on Wikipedia this: "Very approximately, the allowable product of line length and maximum load is proportional to the square of the system voltage" - ( - Capacity heading).
So, if I have a 110kV line with a max load of 122 MVA, it turns that the "allowable" lenght is 99.18. but wikipedia doesn't mention if it's miles or kilometers.
Is this formula applicable for my issue? Is it correct? Is it for miles of kilometers?
Is there another way to calculate this?
Thanks in advance,
keesem