Problem 2: measured current magnitude mismatch, General, Be1-cds240 solution – Basler Electric BE1-CDS240 General Information User Manual
Page 11: Problem 3: mismatch caused by load tap changers, Problem 2: measured current magnitude mismatch -9, Problem 3: mismatch caused by load tap changers -9, Figure 1-2. tap adjust for mismatch -9, Figure 1-3. currents on different voltage bases -9

Problem 2: Measured Current Magnitude Mismatch
General
The currents measured by each set of current inputs can be transformed from their primary values by
different CT ratios. This is illustrated in Figure 1-2. When the zone of protection includes a transformer,
there is another source of magnitude mismatch that must be accounted for. The primary currents that the
differential relay must monitor will be on different voltage bases in most cases. This is due to the
transformer action; the current on each side of the transformer is transformed by the inverse of the
voltage transformation ratio. This is illustrated in Figure 1-3.
BE1-CDS240 Solution
The BE1-CDS240 relay applies a tap adjustment factor to the measured currents to cancel the effect of
dissimilar CT ratio and voltage bases by converting the currents to per unit quantities on a common base.
The tap-adjusted currents are used by the percentage restrained differential protection functions to
determine the restraint and differential currents. Thus, the mismatch in magnitudes under normal
balanced conditions is eliminated. The tap adjustment factor can be manually entered or automatically
calculated by the relay using parameters entered for each CT input circuit and for the differential tap
settings.
The setup parameters for each of the current input circuits are described in Section 3, Input and Output
Functions, Power System Inputs. The CT ratio is included to allow the currents to be metered, displayed,
and reported in primary values. The CT ratio is also used as a parameter for the automatic tap calculation
feature.
Figure 1-2. Tap Adjust for Mismatch
Figure 1-3. Currents on Different
Voltage Bases
The setup parameters for the tap adjustment factor are described in Section 4, Protection and Control,
Differential Protection. The user can enter the megavolt ampere (MVA) base for the application and the
kilovolt (kV) base for each current input and the relay will automatically calculate the taps using these
settings and the settings for each current input circuit. Alternatively, the user can enter the taps directly for
each CT input.
Problem 3: Mismatch Caused by Load Tap Changers
General
The voltage transformation ratio (and thus the current transformation ratio) of a transformer within the
zone of the differential can be adjusted in service by typically ±10% with the use of load tap changers.
D2837-18
12-14-98
600:5
400A
600:5
400A
600:5
400A
CDS
1200:5
1200A
5.0 A
Secondary
10.0 A
Secondary
Input 1 Tap = 5
Input 2 Tap = 10
So 5A = 1 x Tap
10A = 1 x Tap
Current-out balances current-in (in multiples of tap).
40A
D2837-17.vsd
12-14-98
2400/240 Volts
H
1
H
0
400A
X
1
X
0
9365200990 Rev M
BE1-CDS240 General Information
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