PE (always learning)
Senior Member
- Location
- Saint Louis
- Occupation
- Professional Engineer
Hello,
Hope everyone is doing well. I have a question pertaining to transformer magnetizing inrush current. I'm doing a project where a 112.5 KVA dry type transformer is being protected by a 175A thermal mag breaker on the primary side. I have been checking the breaker instantaneous trip curve with an inrush current of 8 times the FLA and the breaker manages to not have any nuisance tripping when I assume this magnitude of inrush, but when using 10 times the FLA the breaker would trip in the instantaneous region. The breaker has been adjusted as far as it can go in the instantaneous region as well. I have seen from numerous sources that for low voltage transformers an inrush current of 8 - 12 times the FLA is assumed for inrush current at 0.1 seconds, but that a lot engineers usually just assume 12 times the FLA to go with worst case. I have also seen that the inrush can be far greater than this too sometimes depending on different variables. Would assuming 8 times be playing with fire and should I just tell them to replace the breaker with something that can handle higher inrush current or am I thinking too much about this? When performing selective coordination studies is 12 times the FLA always assumed?
Best Regards,
Engineer in training
Hope everyone is doing well. I have a question pertaining to transformer magnetizing inrush current. I'm doing a project where a 112.5 KVA dry type transformer is being protected by a 175A thermal mag breaker on the primary side. I have been checking the breaker instantaneous trip curve with an inrush current of 8 times the FLA and the breaker manages to not have any nuisance tripping when I assume this magnitude of inrush, but when using 10 times the FLA the breaker would trip in the instantaneous region. The breaker has been adjusted as far as it can go in the instantaneous region as well. I have seen from numerous sources that for low voltage transformers an inrush current of 8 - 12 times the FLA is assumed for inrush current at 0.1 seconds, but that a lot engineers usually just assume 12 times the FLA to go with worst case. I have also seen that the inrush can be far greater than this too sometimes depending on different variables. Would assuming 8 times be playing with fire and should I just tell them to replace the breaker with something that can handle higher inrush current or am I thinking too much about this? When performing selective coordination studies is 12 times the FLA always assumed?
Best Regards,
Engineer in training