aelectricalman
Senior Member
- Location
- KY
I have been in the Power Factor correction industry going on 5 years. I have designed, engineered and installed cap banks and have learned from some of the best in doing so. There are some minor chinks in my armor in that I have a lot left to learn. When dealing with customers that are billed primary meter rates, I have chosen a pole mount (out on the line) approach for several reasons. The reasons are,
1. Your whole objective with Power Factor correction is to please the meter! So, why not correct at the meter (on the pole). Don't forget, Im talking primary industrial.
2. If you correct on the line side of the step down transformers, you do not have to account for the power factor of the step down transformer. Usually they are 90% or so. That means reduced capacitance required.
3. The higher the voltage you correct at, the smaller amount of KVAR needed to do the job. Therefore, you can again reduce the equipment size. the equipment we buy cost roughly the same at 13.80kV as it does at 480V.
4. You cut down on line loss to the meter. If you place the cap banks at the equipment, you are moving far away from the meter. The whole objective is to satisfy the meter.
5. There is no overcurrent protection needed other than cutouts and fuse links. Very cheap compared to adding breakers and building an enclosure to house the breaker, not to mention wiring all of the equipment together.
6. The cost to install the equipment is relatively the same. You need 2 bucket trucks and a medium voltage crew but you reduce the amount of labor to install. You reduce the amount of materials needed to install. So, I give the heads up to Medium Voltage.
Both require brief downtime. If youre licensed around here to do so, you may not even need to bring the building down to add the banks on medium voltage.
What I would like is for someone to challenge me and tell me why it is better to install capacitors on the individual pieces of service or utilization equipment. I am open to learning, I just dont know the pros of individual correction. I am not talking about using banks on the 480V side. I know it makes more sense to go medium voltage in this instance. I'm just not sold on individual cap banks scattered amongst a building. Thanks for you time. I hope this turns out to be a good discussion.
1. Your whole objective with Power Factor correction is to please the meter! So, why not correct at the meter (on the pole). Don't forget, Im talking primary industrial.
2. If you correct on the line side of the step down transformers, you do not have to account for the power factor of the step down transformer. Usually they are 90% or so. That means reduced capacitance required.
3. The higher the voltage you correct at, the smaller amount of KVAR needed to do the job. Therefore, you can again reduce the equipment size. the equipment we buy cost roughly the same at 13.80kV as it does at 480V.
4. You cut down on line loss to the meter. If you place the cap banks at the equipment, you are moving far away from the meter. The whole objective is to satisfy the meter.
5. There is no overcurrent protection needed other than cutouts and fuse links. Very cheap compared to adding breakers and building an enclosure to house the breaker, not to mention wiring all of the equipment together.
6. The cost to install the equipment is relatively the same. You need 2 bucket trucks and a medium voltage crew but you reduce the amount of labor to install. You reduce the amount of materials needed to install. So, I give the heads up to Medium Voltage.
Both require brief downtime. If youre licensed around here to do so, you may not even need to bring the building down to add the banks on medium voltage.
What I would like is for someone to challenge me and tell me why it is better to install capacitors on the individual pieces of service or utilization equipment. I am open to learning, I just dont know the pros of individual correction. I am not talking about using banks on the 480V side. I know it makes more sense to go medium voltage in this instance. I'm just not sold on individual cap banks scattered amongst a building. Thanks for you time. I hope this turns out to be a good discussion.