10 bus area, Busing system – GE Industrial Solutions Entellisys Installation User Manual

Page 25

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19

Entellisys Low Voltage Switchgear

Chapter 3. Description

3-10 Bus Area

The bus area,

Fig.

3-14, contains the main horizontal bus and

vertical riser bus bars (1) for the particular section. The

vertical bus bars are supported at the breaker run-ins (2)

that are bolted to the molded bases (3) that form the rear

wall of the breaker compartment. The horizontal bus bars

are supported by the power connectors (4), which are bolted

to the vertical bus bars. All bolted supports and connections

are accessible from the rear for maintenance. The bus area is

fully isolated from the breaker, instrument and auxiliary

compartments by the molded bases or glass polyester sheet.

1 Vertical riser bus

2. Run-ins to breaker compartment

3. Molded base

4. Power Connector

5. Run-backs from breaker compartment

6. Short-circuit brace


Fig. 3-14. Bus construction







Busing System

Bus bars are fully tin-plated copper with bolted joints. The

standard construction is open bus. A barrier system (Bus

compartmentalization) that isolates the main and vertical

bus bars from the cable area is available as an option. All

run-backs (load-side power conductors) from the breaker

compartment to the cable termination area are covered with

non-PVC insulated tubing.


The typical arrangement is shown in

Fig.

3-15.

The standard bracing is 65,000 amperes, RMS symmetrical.

Bracing for 100,000, 150,000 and 200,000 amperes, RMS

symmetrical is available as an option.

In general, when the switchgear equipment has no more than

four sections or does not exceed 10 feet in length, it will be

shipped as one complete lineup. In such cases, the only field

assembly would be to a close-coupled transformer if, the

switchgear were part of a Load Center Unit Substation. If,

because of shipping and/or handling considerations, the

equipment cannot be handled in one piece, it can be split into

two or more shipping sections at the factory. The individual

shipping splits require both mechanical and electrical

connections between sections to be made in the field. At

these shipping splits, provisions are made for bolting all

buses and making the necessary electrical and mechanical

connections. These are described in Chapter 4 of this

publication.

On main and tie breakers, the bus area,

Fig.

3-15, is divided

into an upper (1) and lower (2) section by a glass reinforced

polyester isolation barrier (3). For typical unit substation

main circuit breakers, the upper section contains the

incoming line bus (4). The lower section of the bus area

contains the load side main bus (5) (protected by the main

breaker) that feeds all sections of the switchgear equipment.

Similarly, barriers at tie breakers isolate the two main bus

sections from each other.

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