3-14
C60 Breaker Protection System
GE Multilin
3.2 WIRING
3 HARDWARE
3
Figure 3–14: FORM-A AND SOLID-STATE CONTACT OUTPUTS WITH VOLTAGE AND CURRENT MONITORING
The operation of voltage and current monitors is reflected with the corresponding FlexLogic operands (
CONT OP # VON
,
CONT OP # VOFF
, and
CONT OP # ION
) which can be used in protection, control, and alarm logic. The typical application of
the voltage monitor is breaker trip circuit integrity monitoring; a typical application of the current monitor is seal-in of the
control command.
See the
Digital Elements
section of chapter 5 for an example of how form-A and solid-state relay contacts can be applied
for breaker trip circuit integrity monitoring.
Consider relay contacts unsafe to touch when the unit is energized.
USE OF FORM-A AND SOLID-STATE RELAY OUTPUTS IN HIGH IMPEDANCE CIRCUITS
For form-A and solid-state relay output contacts internally equipped with a voltage measuring circuit across the con-
tact, the circuit has an impedance that can cause a problem when used in conjunction with external high input
impedance monitoring equipment such as modern relay test set trigger circuits. These monitoring circuits may con-
tinue to read the form-A contact as being closed after it has closed and subsequently opened, when measured as
an impedance.
The solution is to use the voltage measuring trigger input of the relay test set, and connect the form-A contact
through a voltage-dropping resistor to a DC voltage source. If the 48 V DC output of the power supply is used as a
source, a 500
Ω
, 10 W resistor is appropriate. In this configuration, the voltage across either the form-A contact or
the resistor can be used to monitor the state of the output.
Wherever a tilde “~” symbol appears, substitute with the slot position of the module; wherever a number sign “#”
appears, substitute the contact number
When current monitoring is used to seal-in the form-A and solid-state relay contact outputs, the Flex-
Logic operand driving the contact output should be given a reset delay of 10 ms to prevent damage
of the output contact (in situations when the element initiating the contact output is bouncing, at val-
ues in the region of the pickup value).
Load
I
~#a
~#b
~#c
V
827862A4.CDR
+
+
+
+
+
a) Voltage with optional
current monitoring
Voltage monitoring only
Load
I
V
Both voltage and current monitoring
Load
I
V
b) Current with optional
voltage monitoring
Current monitoring only
Both voltage and current monitoring
(external jumper a-b is required)
Load
V
Load
c) No monitoring
~#a
~#b
~#c
~#a
~#b
~#c
~#a
~#b
~#c
~#a
~#b
~#c
I
WARNING
NOTE
NOTE
NOTICE
Summary of Contents for C60
Page 10: ...x C60 Breaker Protection System GE Multilin TABLE OF CONTENTS ...
Page 30: ...1 20 C60 Breaker Protection System GE Multilin 1 5 USING THE RELAY 1 GETTING STARTED 1 ...
Page 420: ...5 284 C60 Breaker Protection System GE Multilin 5 10 TESTING 5 SETTINGS 5 ...
Page 466: ...8 4 C60 Breaker Protection System GE Multilin 8 1 FAULT LOCATOR 8 THEORY OF OPERATION 8 ...
Page 478: ...9 12 C60 Breaker Protection System GE Multilin 9 6 DISPOSAL 9 MAINTENANCE 9 ...
Page 492: ...A 14 C60 Breaker Protection System GE Multilin A 1 PARAMETER LISTS APPENDIX A A ...
Page 648: ...E 10 C60 Breaker Protection System GE Multilin E 1 OVERVIEW APPENDIX E E ...
Page 660: ...F 12 C60 Breaker Protection System GE Multilin F 2 DNP POINT LISTS APPENDIX F F ...
Page 670: ...H 8 C60 Breaker Protection System GE Multilin H 2 ABBREVIATIONS APPENDIX H H Z Impedance Zone ...
Page 672: ...H 10 C60 Breaker Protection System GE Multilin H 3 WARRANTY APPENDIX H H ...
Page 682: ...x C60 Breaker Protection System GE Multilin INDEX ...