GE Industrial Solutions Galaxy Vector Rack Mounted Controller J85501M-1 User Manual

Page 32

Advertising
background image

Galaxy Rack-Mounted Vector Controller J85501M-1

3 - 4 Operation

Issue 2 January 2008

The Vector is equipped to detect a high voltage condition on the
system bus. Such a high voltage condition may typically be
caused by lightning-induced transients on the commercial ac or
a rectifier failure may cause an individual rectifier to go high. To
prevent a high voltage condition from damaging the connected
load, the Vector also sends a signal for the rectifiers to shut down
if the plant voltage goes above a second threshold.

When the system voltage increases above the threshold for
“High Float Voltage,” it issues the High Float Voltage minor
alarm. If the voltage continues to rise and reaches the threshold
for “Very High Voltage,” that alarm is issued as a major alarm
and a shutdown signal is issued simultaneously to the plant
rectifiers. Any rectifier which is producing at least 10% of its
rated capacity and is 10% over the average of all rectifier outputs
in the plant, responds to this shutdown signal by shutting down
with a RFA or ALM condition active and reports back to the
Vector. A restart attempt initiated by the controller occurs 4
seconds after the controller receives the RFA signal from the
rectifier. The rectifier then attempts to restart three times. During
the restart sequence, the rectifier, recognizing that its output
current exceeds the average rectifier current, shuts down and
tries again up to three times.

For plants with the battery thermal lower temperature
compensation disabled, the High Float Voltage threshold is
usually set approximately 0.75V above float for a 48V plant and
0.5V above float for a 24V plant. High Voltage shutdown
threshold is then usually set approximately 2.5V above float for
a 48V plant and 1.0V above float for a 24V plant. In plants with
battery thermal lower temperature compensation enabled, the
High Float Voltage threshold is usually set approximately 0.8V
above the maximum voltage due to low temperature in a 48V
plant and 0.5V in a 24V plant.

Very High Voltage shutdown is usually 0.5V above the High
Float Voltage threshold for 48V plants and 0.25V above the
High Float Voltage threshold in 24V plants. Like the BD and
VLV thresholds, these are set in the Galaxy VC in the
configuration mode as described in the Installation,
Configuration and Operation section of this manual (Section 4).
S1.2 set to “0” will assign the HV/2ACF/VLV alarm contact to
the standard default of HV for the Very High Voltage shutdown
condition.

Advertising