Anyone has an idea why the generator and the Transformer are being eliminated from the short circuit method. I cant seem to come up with the 1030 via the MVA method, unless I just look at the line. Any help would be appreciated .
Please provide the questionAnyone has an idea why the generator and the Transformer are being eliminated from the short circuit method. I cant seem to come up with the 1030 via the MVA method, unless I just look at the line. Any help would be appreciated .
Generator contribution should be taken in this case. Is the answer not 45.76 MVA;or 800.6A?
After rethinking- I guess the generator contribution is small and is neglected. An intelligent choice of options may help.Generator contribution should be taken in this case. Is the answer not 45.76 MVA;or 800.6A?
I solved it by both methods pu as well as actual Z. The answer is same 800A.@tnsparky. Great explanation. The answers are a) 200 b) 820 c) 880 and d) 1030.
The answer in the book is 1030. I come up with 882. with the @TNSparky approach. So what am I still missing. 25/.06 = 417 and the line contribution is 33Kv^2/ (.12*5.28*30)=57.3
417 || 57.3 = 50.37 MVA. So 50.37*1000/(sqrt 3* 33) = 882. Book has 1030
I am totally confused now.It would seem the generator is the source but the maximum amount of energy available for the fault is dictated by the weakest link: in this case, the 25 MVA transformer. You can't push 50 MVA through a 25 MVA transformer.
Pardon my negligence Line Z is wrong.I am totally confused now.
This is what I got:
Z base= 33^2kv/25MVA= 43.56
30 miles=48km
48km=157480.31 feet
so Z for 30 miles long line is 157480.31*0.120= 18897.63
Zpu line= 18897.63/43.56= 433.82PU
ZT=0.06
PU SC= 1/(0.06+433.82)=2.30
Base Transformer fault current= 25*10^6/(sqrt 3 *33*10^3) = 437.38
So 437.38*2.30 = 1006
Nearest possible answer is 1030A.
If you ignore Gen, yes the answer is correct 892 A. But on adding Genr contribution the current will reduce to 800, This is because the gen impedance is added to the circuit.I got 892A after changing Z line to 0.43
I got 800.5 A using the pu method. Keep in mind, the generator and XFMR are not on the same power base. This has to be corrected, in turn, adjusting the impedance of the generator.No, what @TNSparky said is not exactly true, but I know what he means. Without a source, the fault current would be goose eggs! You have to get the generator and transformer on the same power base, then all other pu values will adjust accordingly. After obtaining all pu values, use the appropriate formula and multiply this value by the FLA of the transformer.
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