cgorham_rei
Member
- Location
- USA
I hope this is appropriate to reply here as I have searched the forums for this article number without finding any discussions on the exception.
to me overload protection can be afforded in two ways:
1. Generator controllers have integral current sensors and protective relaying for self preservation purposes. So if the 50 and 51 relays are set to a certain definite and time current characteristic the feeder
from the generator terminal cabinet to the first OCPD should be considered protected if the conductor damage characteristic is coordinated with these, and a shunt trip signal opens the remote overcurrent protective device.
2. Temporarily ignoring the generator controls and relaying, if the trip setting of a downstream circuit breaker is set to a value less than or exactly equal to the nameplate ampacity of the generator to me the generator conductors are protected from long time overload conditions by the circuit breaker.
3. To me the only application of the 115% sizing would come into play if the first overcurrent device or combined size of multiple grouped OCPD's exceeds the nameplate of the genset the 115% sizing requirement would be required.
can someone please provide feedback on this.
to me overload protection can be afforded in two ways:
1. Generator controllers have integral current sensors and protective relaying for self preservation purposes. So if the 50 and 51 relays are set to a certain definite and time current characteristic the feeder
from the generator terminal cabinet to the first OCPD should be considered protected if the conductor damage characteristic is coordinated with these, and a shunt trip signal opens the remote overcurrent protective device.
2. Temporarily ignoring the generator controls and relaying, if the trip setting of a downstream circuit breaker is set to a value less than or exactly equal to the nameplate ampacity of the generator to me the generator conductors are protected from long time overload conditions by the circuit breaker.
3. To me the only application of the 115% sizing would come into play if the first overcurrent device or combined size of multiple grouped OCPD's exceeds the nameplate of the genset the 115% sizing requirement would be required.
can someone please provide feedback on this.