- Location
- Illinois
- Occupation
- retired electrician
Poor coordination protective devices Operation thenFWIW, I just got demand data on a 2000 amp service and it was only 350 amps, so that sizing is certainly potentially reasonable.
I really have no idea what you're saying, nor do I understand .what coordination has to do with my comment.Poo
Poor coordination protective devices Operation then
A fault at service disconnect, poco transformer ocd if any operate first
Generally i think that would be ok. Did a service 4 years ago that had (3) 166 KVA. My home town has a (3) 333 bank. Not saying those poles are loving life thoughThis was an upgrade from 600 amp 120/240 to 1200 amp 208Y/120 to support air conditioning that was added to a school. The secondary conductors appear to be three sets of 600 kcmil, but it sure looks like 25 kVA transformers to me.
A true 1200 amp service would require three 150 kVA transformers...not even sure you could support three 150 kVAs on a pole. I think they are around 1800 pounds each.
I think what @Deltaforce was saying is that the utility owned OCPD devices on the transformer would likely open before the customer owned OCPD devices in the service equipment.I really have no idea what you're saying, nor do I understand .what coordination has to do with my comment.
IIRC, MV side fusing is often about 3x transformer FLC, at least that is whAt Eaton recommend in a paper, of course utilities might have their own guidelines and strategies.I think what @Deltaforce was saying is that the utility owned OCPD devices on the transformer would likely open before the customer owned OCPD devices in the service equipment.
This _might_ be true on overload, but AFAIK there are no requirements for selective coordination between utility and service equipment, and it is quite likely that the utility understands the actually expected load presented by the building with the 1200A service.
They may be looking at the actual loads on the old 600 amp 120/240 volt service, but a substantial amount of new air conditioning load was installed and they don't have any idea what that load may be.and it is quite likely that the utility understands the actually expected load presented by the building with the 1200A service.
My understanding is that the typical utility transformer sizing is based on the largest fuse that they can use, but small enough to to coordinate with the next upstream distribution circuit OCPD. No intent to provide any real protection for their transformers.IIRC, MV side fusing is often about 3x transformer FLC, at least that is whAt Eaton recommend in a paper, of course utilities might have their own guidelines and strategies.
Was that service upgraded without utility knowledge? Unless it was done on the DL, wouldn't the utility know about the increased load?They may be looking at the actual loads on the old 600 amp 120/240 volt service, but a substantial amount of new air conditioning load was installed and they don't have any idea what that load may be.
Was that service upgraded without utility knowledge? Unless it was done on the DL, wouldn't the utility know about the increased load?
The are pretty lax on looking at proposed new loads.Was that service upgraded without utility knowledge? Unless it was done on the DL, wouldn't the utility know about the increased load?
Yes, so 1200 amp three phase is a big increase in capacity compared to the old 600 amp single phase one.Oh I missed that the old service was single phase
Most power companies do not care about a lack of coordination with customer secondary side OCPD. They worry about the primary side coordination with the rest of their grid.A fault at service disconnect, poco transformer ocd if any operate first
I am pretty sure they are only 25s. It is possible they are still running on the 600 amp single phase service as the utility has not cut that transformer loose and it only feeds the school.I didn't do deep scanning and searching of a picture but no way those are 150s. 25s look very consistent with the piggies vs the pole. I've seen 150 piggies and you would know. I'm just baffled with the size of that service. Even if it is a building full of electric gerbil feeders, any rational math I got does not compute. Flip the switch and my bet is the POCO will be back within a week to fix that huge whiff.