AMBATISTA
Member
- Location
- SACRAMENTO, CA
- Occupation
- EE
I am hoping to get some good teaching/correction on my understanding of SCCR.
I have a project where the chiller mfg states that the SCCR is 5,000A. Our AFC at the chiller is 19,000A on the 240V side. The chiller is fed with a separate 120V circuit for the control board. The chiller is 240V, 3 phase. (see page 35 and 36 of submittal)https://www.shareddocs.com/hvac/docs/1005/Public/06/30HX-16PD.pdf
The wiring diagram shows that most of the control components seem to just be switches, interlocks, relays, with either 24VDC or 120V ratings. I don’t see how the compressor is controlled on the wiring diagram.
The manufacturer has a bulletin, which talks about the possibility of increasing the SCCR. It specifically calls out the replacement of components within the control board (how do I attach PDFs?)
My questions:
I do understand another option would be an isolation transformer to reduce the incoming available fault current.
Appreciate any help
I have a project where the chiller mfg states that the SCCR is 5,000A. Our AFC at the chiller is 19,000A on the 240V side. The chiller is fed with a separate 120V circuit for the control board. The chiller is 240V, 3 phase. (see page 35 and 36 of submittal)https://www.shareddocs.com/hvac/docs/1005/Public/06/30HX-16PD.pdf
The wiring diagram shows that most of the control components seem to just be switches, interlocks, relays, with either 24VDC or 120V ratings. I don’t see how the compressor is controlled on the wiring diagram.
The manufacturer has a bulletin, which talks about the possibility of increasing the SCCR. It specifically calls out the replacement of components within the control board (how do I attach PDFs?)
My questions:
- Is it clear that the entire machine (compressor motors + the control panel) has an SCCR of 5,000A, i.e. does it not matter if the control panel has a separate feed? If this is so, then I should calc the available fault current on the 240V side.
- Is it possible that only the control board is rated at 5,000A? This seems unlikely to me. But if it was true, then could I calculate the available fault current on the 120V side only?
- If the control board clearly had a 120V->240V contactor for the compressor, then most likely that contactor would be the component that could experience a fault on the 240V side, which would require us to calculate the available fault current on the 240V side. Is my thinking correct here?
- In general (for my own understanding of SCCR), if a control board is fed downstream of the incoming machine power (single point of power connection for the chiller), can you simply provide Class J fuse that would reduce the available fault down to 5,000A before the connection and that solves the problem? Or does that fuse need to be somehow selected/coordinated with the control power components in the control panel?
I do understand another option would be an isolation transformer to reduce the incoming available fault current.
Appreciate any help