Introduction: Medium Voltage Protection Relays for the Future
In industrial and power systems, protective relays are the core equipment that ensures the safe and stable operation of the power grid. With the development of digital technology, modern protective relays are no longer just fault detection devices, but intelligent terminals that integrate protection, measurement, monitoring, communication, and control. The FP-5000 multifunctional protection relay launched by Eaton is a representative work of this trend.
FP-5000 is a panel mounted relay based on microprocessor technology, designed to comply with both ANSI and IEC standards. It can be applied to the protection of incoming lines, connections or feeders of any voltage level, especially suitable for medium voltage distribution lines of 69kV and below. The device includes AC or DC control power supply and can achieve True RMS detection of each phase and ground current. A single FP-5000 can meet the complete protection requirements of three-phase circuits, integrating multiple protection functions such as current, voltage, and user selectable options.
This article aims to provide a comprehensive technical guide for system engineers, operators, and maintenance personnel, deeply analyzing the functional characteristics, technical specifications, installation and debugging, programming configuration, and communication applications of FP-5000, helping users fully tap into the potential of this intelligent protection relay.
Core protection functions and features
The outstanding advantage of FP-5000 lies in its rich protection function library. Through IEEE standard equipment numbering classification, it covers almost all the protection elements required for medium voltage feeders.
2.1 Overcurrent protection (50/51/67)
Instantaneous overcurrent (50P, 50X, 50R): Provides two-stage independent instantaneous overcurrent components, each of which can be set with direction (forward, reverse, or bidirectional) and adjustable delay (0-9999 cycles). 50P is for phase current, 50X is for the fourth CT input (usually used for grounding or neutral point), and 50R is the calculated residual current.
Inverse time overcurrent (51P, 51X, 51R): supports 10 standard curves and 3 user-defined curves. The curve family includes thermal models (It, I ² t, I ⁴ t, Flat), ANSI standards (extreme inversion, very inversion, medium inversion), and IEC standards (IEC-A, IEC-B, IEC-C). Users can set the startup value, time multiplier, and reset characteristics (instantaneous, timed, or computational reset).
Directional element (67): The overcurrent element can select directionality and accurately determine the fault direction through phase to phase voltage or zero sequence/negative sequence voltage polarization.
2.2 Voltage and Frequency Protection (27/59/81)
Main voltage/auxiliary voltage components: provide two-stage undervoltage (27M-1/2, 27A-1/2) and overvoltage (59M-1/2, 59A-1/2) protection respectively, which can operate for any phase, any two phases or three phases.
Neutral point overvoltage (59N): Based on calculated or measured zero sequence voltage, it can be selected to start based on fundamental or true RMS.
Frequency protection (81): two-stage underfrequency (81U) and overclocking (81O) protection, with an accuracy of up to ± 0.02Hz.
2.3 Unbalance and Power Protection (46/47/32)
Negative sequence current/voltage protection (46, 47): detects system imbalance by calculating the ratio of negative sequence to positive sequence. Set thresholds (based on I ₁/I ₂ or V ₁/V ₂ amplitude) and percentage settings separately, and delay tripping.
Power protection (32): It can be configured as forward or reverse power, and can choose between over power or under power criteria for reverse power protection or load loss detection.
2.4 Circuit Breaker Related Functions (50BF, Circuit Breaker Monitoring)
Circuit breaker failure protection (50BF): When a trip command is issued, if the fault current still exists after a set delay, a backup trip signal is issued. It can be set as internal trip start, external input start, or both.
Circuit breaker status monitoring: Real time monitoring of the position of the circuit breaker through the auxiliary contacts of 5a/56a, and providing functions such as inconsistent status alarm, slow opening/closing alarm, and monitoring of tripping/closing coils.
Wear record of circuit breaker: Accumulate breaking current and operation times, and issue maintenance alarm when reaching the set threshold.
2.5 Other advanced protection functions
Regional interlocking (87B): Through hard wiring, rapid interlocking and coordination between adjacent protection devices are achieved, enabling selective busbar protection levels.
Simultaneous inspection (25): Used in situations where synchronous closing is required, the maximum voltage difference, angle difference, and slip can be set.
Cold Load Pickup: When the line is disconnected for a long time and then reconnected, it automatically adjusts the overcurrent setting or locks the instantaneous period to prevent misoperation caused by load surge.