Every one I've seen, the vacuum CB is a vacuum contactor with an electronic trip unit. The coordination curve is set by the trip unit programming.Mike01 said:What makes a medium voltage circuit breaker trip??
Do you have to have a electronic trip device (ex. digitrip)
When looking at a coordination curve is there a breaker curve or is it just the settings of the electronic relays that activate the breaker?
You can still buy breakers with electro mechanical relays in them .coulter said:Every one I've seen, the vacuum CB is a vacuum contactor with an electronic trip unit. The coordination curve is set by the trip unit programming.
carl
The type of curve is normally determined to match other protection that it has to coordinate with. ANSI curves will coordinate easier with other ANSI curves.Mike01 said:What other types of circuit breakers would be available on medium voltage all I have seen is vacuum circuit breakers, and regarding the relays it appears (from some of my own investigation) that there are three distinct curve types each with up to 4 curve types most relays allow you to select the type of protection you want, either Thermal, ANSI, or IEC curves each category with sub categories like I2t, I4t, inverse, very inverse, what is the true advantage to one style (thermal, ansi, iec) over the other? I know the IEEE Blue Book refers to the application of Low Voltage Circuit Breakers, but is there any IEEE Color Book that refers to the application of medium voltage C.B.?s? How would you know what type to select and then what sub, type below that? Or is this something usually left to the coordination end of the project??
jghrist said:The type of curve is normally determined to match other protection that it has to coordinate with. ANSI curves will coordinate easier with other ANSI curves.
I didn't know that. I've never seen a vacuum CB or SF6 with mechanical relays.djohns6 said:You can still buy breakers with electro mechanical relays in them .
We bought a few last year .
Didn't know that. Thanks. Apparently I haven't spent much time looking at the mechanical end of the devicesJraef said:Just to nit pick, there is technically a difference between the vacuum bottles used in a vacuum breaker and a vacuum contactor. Vacuum breakers use cheaper bottles and may exhibit "chop" when used to open and close repeatedly as a contactor would be. vacuum breakers are only meant to be opened under fault conditions, contactors are made to be opened under normal loads. ...
coulter said:I didn't know that. I've never seen a vacuum CB or SF6 with mechanical relays.
carl
rcwilson said:A electro-mechnical overcurrent relay does not need control power. Couple the relays with a breaker that has a capacitor trip device to store the tripping power and you have a substation feeder breaker that doesn't need a battery system to trip.
A belt and suspenders engineer might use this method on a second trip coil as backup disaster protection in a remote substation.
There are some interesting videos of substations burning down when they lost DC control power and a fault occurred but the breaker couldn't trip.
rcwilson said:A electro-mechnical overcurrent relay does not need control power. Couple the relays with a breaker that has a capacitor trip device to store the tripping power and you have a substation feeder breaker that doesn't need a battery system to trip.
A belt and suspenders engineer might use this method on a second trip coil as backup disaster protection in a remote substation.
There are some interesting videos of substations burning down when they lost DC control power and a fault occurred but the breaker couldn't trip.
zog said:dont have the data to back it up but I would guess a battery system with a remote alarm on the charger is the most reliable system for your money