Discuss Didcot power station 33KV incident 18/08/19 in the Electricians' Talk area at ElectriciansForums.net

UKMeterman

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I think it was a rough bit of work.

The Risk Assessment should have checked out cables in the vicinity of the falling towers.


In one video you can see the towers hitting the cables, they were saying about and touching each other.
 
I think it was a rough bit of work.

The Risk Assessment should have checked out cables in the vicinity of the falling towers.


In one video you can see the towers hitting the cables, they were saying about and touching each other.
sounds like drunk students on a saturday night also
 
Didcot power station cooling towers were demolished today,
in the process there was damage to a 33KV substation. The strange thing is that there was signifcant flashover on the 33KV network causing alleged damage and injury to the public. Some videos here



What do people think was the sequence of events?
Do y’all think that dust from the cooling towers was conductive with carbon possibly shorted out the 33k power lines
 
The swaying HV lines in one clip is caused by the electromagnetic forces between them due to the fault currents flowing in them - see Ampere's Law and Lorentz forces. Perhaps the amplitude of these sways was such the lines touched causing the shower of sparks over any nearby onlookers.

1566192130204.png
 
So, for a pair of parallel conductors, if the fault current was 10kA = I1 = I2 = then force per metre of line when the lines are a metre apart is:

1.25 x 10exp-6 x 10 x 1000 x 10 x 1000/(2pi x 1) =

approximately

1.25/6 x 10exp-6 x 10exp8 = 0.2 x 10exp2 = 0.20 x 100 = 20N/m

mu is the permeability of free space or magnetic constant and is - 1.25663706 × 10-6 m kg s-2 A-2

So for a 50m span total force is 50 x 20 = 1000Newtons.

As the force pulls the conductors together it increases - F is inversely related to r - so towards mid span where the conductors are freer to sway more, the forces will be much higher. On top of this, the impulse nature of this force will set up transverse vibrations of the conductors.
 
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