Brytonnegahban
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I am having a tough time wrapping my head around when square root 3 is used or not used when solving for fault current. Both of the NCEES Practice Exam questions below solved for fault current, but one used sqrt(3) and the other didn't.
NCEES Practice Exam #110
The only load on a 3-phase, 4-wire system is placed between Phase B and Phase C. The phase-to-phase voltage is 13.2 kV. The load is 500 kVA at 0.85 lagging power factor. The magnitude of the line current (amperes) in Phase C is most nearly:
Answer
I_c = 500 kVA/13.2 kV = 37.9 A
NCEES Practice Exam #132
Consider the 60-kV transmission system below. Transmission line impedances are: Z_1 = 16.75 <71deg Ohms, Z_2 = 13.4 <71deg Ohms. With a system impedance of Z_system = 13.25 <81 deg Ohms, the 3-phase fault current (amperes) at Station C is most nearly:
Answer
I_fault = [60,000/sqrt(3)]/(16.75 <71 + 13.4 <71 + 13.25 <81)
NCEES Practice Exam #110
The only load on a 3-phase, 4-wire system is placed between Phase B and Phase C. The phase-to-phase voltage is 13.2 kV. The load is 500 kVA at 0.85 lagging power factor. The magnitude of the line current (amperes) in Phase C is most nearly:
Answer
I_c = 500 kVA/13.2 kV = 37.9 A
NCEES Practice Exam #132
Consider the 60-kV transmission system below. Transmission line impedances are: Z_1 = 16.75 <71deg Ohms, Z_2 = 13.4 <71deg Ohms. With a system impedance of Z_system = 13.25 <81 deg Ohms, the 3-phase fault current (amperes) at Station C is most nearly:
Answer
I_fault = [60,000/sqrt(3)]/(16.75 <71 + 13.4 <71 + 13.25 <81)