mwm1752
Senior Member
- Location
- Aspen, Colo
oh
actually I got off on the wrong track as pv systems supply electricity & I would think the disconnect for pv fault currents would be rated per pv input power not utility -- so what is the max fault current on< 1 meg system???
now I have to look in the book
Fault current still comes from the utility
Well, yes. A grid tied inverter cannot feed a short circuit. Its nameplate maximum output current is just what it says - the most current it can produce - but unless it sees AC line voltage within its parameter window, it cannot produce anything.I looked at the spec sheets for the SolarEdge inverters, and could not find an SCCR value. Am I misunderstanding something here?
Most significant, IMHO, is that it is not located between a potential source of fault current and a *downstream* potential fault location. There is nothing "on the other side" of it in terms of an AC load.Well, yes. A grid tied inverter cannot feed a short circuit. Its nameplate maximum output current is just what it says - the most current it can produce - but unless it sees AC line voltage within its parameter window, it cannot produce anything.
Well, yes. A grid tied inverter cannot feed a short circuit. Its nameplate maximum output current is just what it says - the most current it can produce - but unless it sees AC line voltage within its parameter window, it cannot produce anything.
The panelboard has a source upstream, usually POCO, which can supply very large currents into a bolted fault.Ok, I think I'm understanding this, at least in terms of an inverter. However, doesn't an AC panelboard have an SCCR rating in kA at a defined voltage ...but like an inverter, it is not a source that can feed a short circuit, yet it still has a rating. Or am I still missing something here?
-Andy