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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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Posted to alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair
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![]() ? "daestrom" ?????? ??? ?????? ... "Michael Moroney" wrote in message ... "daestrom" writes: P.S. In the US, a 'tap-changer' may be built for either for unloaded or loaded operation. The 'unloaded' type can not be stepped to another tap while there is load on the unit (although it can still be energized). It's switch contacts cannot interrupt load though, so if you try to move it while loaded, you can burn up the tap-changer. The classic 'load-tap-changer' is actually several switches that are controlled in a precise sequence to shift the load from one tap of the transformer to another while not interrupting the load current. P.P.S. Load tap changers typically have a significant time-delay built into the controls so they do not 'hunt' or respond to short drops in voltage such as starting a large load. 15 seconds to several minutes is typical. So even with load-tap-changers, starting a single load that is a high percentage of the system capacity will *still* result in a voltage dip. Are the load tap generators configured make-before-break? Break-before-make would mean a (very short) power outage every activation but make-before-break would mean a momentarily short-circuited winding and the break would involve interrupting a large short circuit current. Certainly modern ones likely use thyristors and zero crossing detectors. I figured someone would 'bite' :-) Typical large power load-tap-changers have a primary winding and two secondaries. You mean a secondary and a tetriary? The transformer for the hotel load of a 300 MW unit is powered directly from the turbo alternator (21 kV) and has a secondary of 6.6 kV and a tetriary of again 6.6 kV. This is done because it has wye-wye-wye connection (IIRC). The hotel load of such a unit is 10%, also 30 MW, including 7 brown coal mills. Typical size of a 6.6 kV motor is 1 MW. One secondary produces about 100% of 'rated' secondary voltage. The second secondary produces about 15% to 20% of the rated voltage, but has numerous taps from end to end, about 2.5% 'steps'. (for a total of about eight taps). The cental tap of the boost/buck winding is tied to one end of the main secondary. The boost/buck can be used to step from 90% to 110% of the 'design' output. I suppose some can step over a wider range, but I haven't run across them. *TWO* rotary switches have each tap tied to one of the positions of each rotory switch, and each 'wiper' is tied to single heavier contacts that are opened in the operating sequence. The output side of these two interrupting contacts are tied to each end of a large center-tapped inductor. So, normally both rotary switches are aligned to the same transformer tap, both interrupting contacts are shut, and load current flows from the boost/buck winding tap, splits and flows through both rotary switches, both interrupting contacts, enters both ends of the inductor and out the inductor center tap. Because the current flows into both ends of the inductor and the mutual inductance of the two parts cancel, there is little voltage drop in the inductor. Begin step sequence: 1) Open one interrupting contactor. Now load current doubles through half the inductor and is zero in the other half, so the voltage drop across the inductor actually makes output voltage drop, even if trying to step 'up'. 2) Move associated rotary switch to next step of transformer bank. 3) Close interrupting contactor. Now, the two rotary switches are across different taps. The inductor prevents a excessive current, otherwise you have a direct short of the two winding taps. Some tap changers can stop at this point and are called 'half-step' units. Obviously, the inductor has to be rated for sustained operation across a step of the boost/buck winding plus load current in order to survive sustained 'half step' operation. 4) But for tap changers that can't operate 'half-step', the sequence continues. And opens the other interrupting contactor. Now the other half of the inductor has full load current. 5) Move second rotary switch to next step (now both switches are on the new step) 6) Close the second interrupting contactor. You're back in the initial configuration, but with both rotary switches on a new transformer tap. Quite the same principle is done with diesel locomotives and is called diesel-electric transmission, and also in pure electric locomotives (E-Lok in german, for Elektrische Lokomotive). The diesel engine, 2-stroke and usually 600 to 900 rpm at full throttle, is coupled to a generator. The generator has small windings, connected in series for the last notch, higher voltage and relatively smaller current, and in parallel for start, higher amperage and smaller voltage. The traction motors are directly coupled on the wheel shaft, and are air cooled. An E-Lok has a trasformer, with the primary directly supplied by the cetenary, 15 kV 16 2/3 Hz in Germany, and 25 kV 50 Hz in Greece, The secondary uses the same principle. The typical size of a traction motor is 1 MW, 4 (one each shaft) and maximum voltage 700 volts, and are series wound motors with special construction to operate at 16 2/3 Hz (or 50 Hz with today's technology). Typical power of a diesel locomotive is 2850 HP, while an electric is 6000 HP. with 1500 HP at each shaft, also ~1MW. There is a heavy duty 12,000 HP diesel engine in USA(with 6 shafts, also 2000 HP at each shaft). The high speed ICE train (InterCityExpress) in germany is 13,000 HP, has a normal travelling speed of 200 km/h, 2 locomotives, 3-phase induction motors, electronic drive. Older units do this whole thing with a fancy cam/gear arrangement circa 1940's. Just takes a single reversable motor to drive the unit and some limit switches to be sure it can only stop at full 'steps' (or 'half steps' for those capable of running 'half-step') The one we have here operates with a motor. Because the system intermittently inserts an additional voltage drop through the inductor, the control circuits typically have time-delays that prevent it trying to reverse direction or something while stepping. As far as zero-crossing and thyristors, I suppose it's certainly possible, but I haven't run across them for large substations. I have seen such a setup in power-conditioners for computer complexes and such, but that's only a few kVA (one unit I know of was rated for 25 kVA). The mechanical-switch tap changer is well-matured and has the nice advantage that when they 'fail', they 'fail' at the last 'step' and power continues to flow (albeit perhaps the wrong voltage). When I was a kid living in a rather rural area, there would be a pair of these on poles every few miles, connected open delta. (all transformer primaries were connected phase-phase then). Those are smaller than the units I'm thinking of. I'm talking about multiple MVA rated units. I had no idea how it really works, but I got the general idea. -- Tzortzakakis Dimitrios major in electrical engineering mechanized infantry reservist hordad AT otenet DOT gr NB:I killfile googlegroups. |
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