Title: Is It Time To Update Your System Coordination
1Is It Time To Update Your System Coordination?
2The Electric Power Research Institute estimates
annual outage costs to society amount to 119
billion.
3Unscheduled outages cost the average large
industrial customer approximately 40,000.
4Some states are beginning to enforce fines for
poor system performance (primarily in
de-regulated states)
5Is It Time To Update Your System Coordination?
6Approximately 75 percent of all overhead faults
have a temporary cause
7Typical causes of temporary faults
- Lightning
- Animals Birds cause 25 of all overhead outages
in the U.S. - Trees or debris
- Vehicles hitting poles (conductors slap
together)
8A sustained outage is typically defined as an
outage lasting 5 minutes or longer
9Reliability Indices
- Most Common
- SAIDI System Average Interruption Duration
Index - SAIFI System Average Interruption Frequency
Index - CAIDI Customer Average Interruption Duration
Index - MAIFI Momentary Average Interruption Frequency
Index - Less Common
- ASAI Average Service Availability Index
- (8,760-SAIDI)/8,760 x 100
- CEMI Customers Experiencing Multiple
Interruptions
10Typical U.S. Utility Values of
- SAIDI 110 minutes each year
- SAIFI 1.4 interruptions per year
- CAIDI 79 minutes per year
- ASAI 99.98
11A well sectionalized system with good
coordination should decrease the SAIFI, SAIDI and
CAIDI, but may increase the MAIFI
12A well sectionalized system with good
coordination should also decrease your OM costs.
13How much are you spending on a per outage basis?
14When designing an economical coordination scheme,
outage data is an invaluable tool.
15Linemen/Operations staff are the best resource
for determining the locations that could use a
protective device.
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18So, how often should you update your system
coordination?
19Summary of Results, Conclusions and
Recommendations from Conductor Break Tests
20Equipment Used
- Line truck with winch and tested high tension
capacity spring scales. - Conductors were attached using a dead-end shoe.
21introduction
A total of 20 conductor break tests were
preformed, 18 on 4 ACSR and two on 8 CWC. All
conductors were pulled to the point that the
conductor either broke or tension was released
from the wire stretching. All of the damaged
conductors tested were from lines with stretched
conductor which the Engineer recommended to for
either total line replacement or the replacement
of the conductor but were included only for
re-sagging by the FEMA Project Officer.
22SUMMARY OF TEST RESULTS
23NOTE All 4 ACSR conductors which were not
previously stretched in the storm, which were
conductors that broke above their rated breaking
strength, would stretch significantly before
breaking and then break at about 1600 pounds.
24conclusions
- New and undamaged 4 ACSR conductors take a
permanent stretch of a few feet between 2500 and
2600 pounds and then drop in breaking strength to
about 1600 pounds.
25- It is nearly impossible to detect conductor
damage either from the ground or even up close to
the conductor. However, some of the best
indications of conductor damage are - Excessive sag. This probably indicates the
conductor has taken a permanent stretch and has
lost 30-35 percent of its strength. The damaged
(stretched) segment will likely be 10-15 feet in
length.
26- Splices. It was found that many of the
conductors broke at or near a splice. The splice
did not appear to have failed. It is likely that
the entire damage segment of the conductor, up to
ten feet on each side of a break, was not
replaced after the conductor broke and while
splicing new a segment. It appeared that the
aluminum strands broke outside the splice then
the steel strand pulled out of the splice. This
was true for both the automatic and compression
splices tested. - Locations were short circuit contacts frayed or
nicked the conductor. The arc which occurs
during short circuit conditions burns the
conductor and may also anneal the steel strand.
Usually this type of damage is localized to a
short length.
27- The test indicated that when excessive sagging
occurred, it is likely that the conductor was
damaged only is short segments, not the entire
span.
28- The armor rod near the support seems to protect
the conductor from damage due to excessive
tension. - A span of stretched conductor is most likely to
be weakened just beyond the armor rod at the
supports.
29- Short circuit and the resulting pitting on CWC
conductors deduces the strength of the conductor. - Automatic splices, when properly installed, have
as much or more strength as the conductor.
30recommendations
- If a conductor breakers due to tension loading
(i.e., breakers not due to burning from current
at electrical short circuits), a minimum of 5.0
feet on each side of the break should be cut out
before repairing the conductor.
31- Conductors which incurred increase sag due to ice
loading should be replaced as the results of
these tests indicate that there is a high
probability that there was a significant loss of
conductor strength.
32Questions?