gsheetrock wrote:
bbaumer wrote:
... many still use the terrible 40 ohm Rural Utility Services recommended value from 50 years ago.
I believe you are misunderstanding the purpose of the line-to-ground plus 40-ohm fault current (or other fault impedance like 10 or 20 ohms). There is always the possibility that a utility system fault will not result in a bolted line-to-line, line-to-ground, or three-phase fault, and can be observed when phase wires land on the ground and remain energized [1]. Since there is always the possibility of an energized line on the ground, distribution utilities establish a minimum sensitivity for their protection studies.
Yes, at one point in time the RUS standard for this minimum sensitivity was line-to-ground plus 40 ohms (based on [2]?). However, today this standard would require fault sensitivity at that feeder source and along the main-line section of the line that would not allow for the magnitudes of load those feeders carry. Today the RUS design guide calls for engineering judgment [3].
[1] IEEE PES TR2
Downed Power Line: Why They Can't Always be Detected, IEEE Power Engineering Society, February 22, 1989.
[2] Lincks, Edge, McKinley,
Overcurrent Investigation on a Rural Distribution System, AIEE, 1946.
[3] Bulletin 1724E-102
Design Guide for Sectionalizing Distribution Lines, US Department of Agriculture, Rural Utilities Service, p. 39., 2012.