rhatcher
Electrical
- Jan 17, 2001
- 636
I am looking at a system fed by an open-wye/open-delta transformer pair. The primary is 14.4kV and the secondary is 240V, three phase, four wire with a grounded neutral connected to a center tap on one transformer. The nominal single phase voltages are high leg 120V/120V/190V. The loads are primarily single phase lighting and 'appliance' type loads with 2 three-phase motors used to operate large chillers.
The two single phase utility transformers are pad mounted with underground primary and secondary feeds and underground jumpers making the connections to form the open-wye/open-delta configuration. This is a rural distibution system in an area that is almost exclusively single phase loads.
The fault on the utility side was described as a 'failed underground jumper.' The actual location of the jumper in the circuit is unknown.
The result on the secondary side was failure of the 2 three-phase motors that burned up on confirmed single phase winding failures. The other obvious fault symptom is that the safety grounding jumpers on both equipment cabinets were burned free of the connection point. No single phase equipment was damaged. However, to my knowledge the only single phase equipment is lighing and appliance loads that were mostly off at the time.
The fault occurred at night and was discovered early the next morning because the (single-phase) lighing was dark/dim. Subsequent voltage checks revealed that "the voltages were all wrong." Sorry but there is no record of what the measured voltages were. Subsequently the damage to the chillers and the the failure of the underground jumper were discovered.
The big question is that phase loss monitors were installed on both three phase motor loads at the time of the failure. Obviously they did not activate during the failure event. I am also told that although they appeared physically undamaged that when the power was restored that the phase loss monitors failed to power up. Somehow they were internally damaged by the 'event.'
This would seem to be pretty simple case to explain if it were not for the presence of the the phase loss monitors, the fact they failed to act, and the fact that they were somehow damaged and rendered inoperative by the 'event.'
Although the failure of any primary or secondary jumper on the transformer pair would cause single-phasing of down stream three-phase loads, I have a gut feeling that my culprit is the primary side neutral conductor. This is because I am looking for a failure mode that would be accompanied by voltage spikes and/or transients that would take the phase loss monitors out of service (ie, fry the phase loss monitors).
I am suspecting that if the primary side neutral connection failed (burned loose) that the resulting effect of the transformer voltages and currents trying to 'instantaneously' change phase from 120 degree phase shift to 180 degree phase shift would cause some interesting and perhaps dramatic transients.
I would also think that this is would be especially true if the failure mode was a slow burn with a sputtering arc (ie. back and forth transients) instead of a fast and simple 'blow-out.'
Does this make sense to anyone else?
I have reviewed past posts on this topic and I see that waross seems pretty knowledgeable on this type of transformer arrangement so I am hoping that he has some thoughts on this.
The two single phase utility transformers are pad mounted with underground primary and secondary feeds and underground jumpers making the connections to form the open-wye/open-delta configuration. This is a rural distibution system in an area that is almost exclusively single phase loads.
The fault on the utility side was described as a 'failed underground jumper.' The actual location of the jumper in the circuit is unknown.
The result on the secondary side was failure of the 2 three-phase motors that burned up on confirmed single phase winding failures. The other obvious fault symptom is that the safety grounding jumpers on both equipment cabinets were burned free of the connection point. No single phase equipment was damaged. However, to my knowledge the only single phase equipment is lighing and appliance loads that were mostly off at the time.
The fault occurred at night and was discovered early the next morning because the (single-phase) lighing was dark/dim. Subsequent voltage checks revealed that "the voltages were all wrong." Sorry but there is no record of what the measured voltages were. Subsequently the damage to the chillers and the the failure of the underground jumper were discovered.
The big question is that phase loss monitors were installed on both three phase motor loads at the time of the failure. Obviously they did not activate during the failure event. I am also told that although they appeared physically undamaged that when the power was restored that the phase loss monitors failed to power up. Somehow they were internally damaged by the 'event.'
This would seem to be pretty simple case to explain if it were not for the presence of the the phase loss monitors, the fact they failed to act, and the fact that they were somehow damaged and rendered inoperative by the 'event.'
Although the failure of any primary or secondary jumper on the transformer pair would cause single-phasing of down stream three-phase loads, I have a gut feeling that my culprit is the primary side neutral conductor. This is because I am looking for a failure mode that would be accompanied by voltage spikes and/or transients that would take the phase loss monitors out of service (ie, fry the phase loss monitors).
I am suspecting that if the primary side neutral connection failed (burned loose) that the resulting effect of the transformer voltages and currents trying to 'instantaneously' change phase from 120 degree phase shift to 180 degree phase shift would cause some interesting and perhaps dramatic transients.
I would also think that this is would be especially true if the failure mode was a slow burn with a sputtering arc (ie. back and forth transients) instead of a fast and simple 'blow-out.'
Does this make sense to anyone else?
I have reviewed past posts on this topic and I see that waross seems pretty knowledgeable on this type of transformer arrangement so I am hoping that he has some thoughts on this.