In electrical engineering, a protective relay is a relay device designed to trip a circuit breaker when a fault is detected. : 4 The first protective relays were electromagnetic devices, relying on coils operating on moving parts to provide detection of abnormal. Engineering use: Relays are used on feeders, transformers, buses, motors, generators, and transmission lines to protect equipment and improve system reliability. What controls it: Relay performance depends on the protected zone, CT/PT inputs, pickup settings, time delay, breaker clearing time, trip. What are Protective Relays, or Protection Relays? Protective relays are used in industrial power generation and supply systems to open and isolate branch circuits in the case of excessive current. They are activated by means which are not dependent on a continual AC supply. Later, new microprocessor-based generations added. Product Specialist (West Region) for Digital Substation Products at ABB Inc. Currently residing in Denver, Colorado. Previous experience in designing low voltage and medium voltage switchgear, relay panels and custom control panels as an Electrical Engineer at ESSMetron, Denver CO.
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