You almost had to be there but I will do my best to make it clear. POCO was doing a voltage conversion and today was the day to move all transformers from 7200 to 14,400.
The existing 12470/7240Y 3 pase line served was by 3 tap fuses. One customer on the 3 phase line is a 3 phase 120-240 wye/delta transformer bank. 150kVA. Only one primary phase continues on past that load and serves 10 residentail overheadtransformers, all on A phase. Total line is 1 mile from tap fuses to deadend.
POCO is going to kill line at the tap fuses. A phase comes open and there is no arc. The 10 transformers are now supposed to be dead. Less than 5 seconds later the B phase is pulled open and the arc follows the tube like you were breaking 200kVAR. The arc cross phases on hardware and blows 2 line fuses serving this tap fuse location. They pull the third tap fuse and now the mile of three phase is dead plus about a 150 customers who were being served by the high side of tap fuse location because the source side fuses blew.
As line crews had prepared for the upcoming voltage conversion, the three 7200 transformers at the bank were replace and the primary side went from the specified ungrounded wye to a grounded wye because the transformers went from double bushing to single bushing primary.
We are confident that backfeed from the bank to the first phase trying to energize line and 10 transformers is the reason B phase had such a big arc. Remember all the single phase load was on A phase and it cleared with no arc.
What other factors could have contributed? There were no cap banks on the load side of tap fuses.
Would the bank have backfed if the transformer bank had not changed on the high side and stayed ungrounded wye?
We will be discussing this for a while to see what we did wrong and what we can do better.
Thanks
The existing 12470/7240Y 3 pase line served was by 3 tap fuses. One customer on the 3 phase line is a 3 phase 120-240 wye/delta transformer bank. 150kVA. Only one primary phase continues on past that load and serves 10 residentail overheadtransformers, all on A phase. Total line is 1 mile from tap fuses to deadend.
POCO is going to kill line at the tap fuses. A phase comes open and there is no arc. The 10 transformers are now supposed to be dead. Less than 5 seconds later the B phase is pulled open and the arc follows the tube like you were breaking 200kVAR. The arc cross phases on hardware and blows 2 line fuses serving this tap fuse location. They pull the third tap fuse and now the mile of three phase is dead plus about a 150 customers who were being served by the high side of tap fuse location because the source side fuses blew.
As line crews had prepared for the upcoming voltage conversion, the three 7200 transformers at the bank were replace and the primary side went from the specified ungrounded wye to a grounded wye because the transformers went from double bushing to single bushing primary.
We are confident that backfeed from the bank to the first phase trying to energize line and 10 transformers is the reason B phase had such a big arc. Remember all the single phase load was on A phase and it cleared with no arc.
What other factors could have contributed? There were no cap banks on the load side of tap fuses.
Would the bank have backfed if the transformer bank had not changed on the high side and stayed ungrounded wye?
We will be discussing this for a while to see what we did wrong and what we can do better.
Thanks