Publication | Closed Access
Weather-dependent versus static thermal line ratings (power overhead lines)
59
Citations
10
References
1988
Year
MeteorologyPractical LimitationsEngineeringEnergy ManagementElectrical TransmissionCivil EngineeringWeather ForecastingSystems EngineeringMeteorological MeasurementApplied MeteorologyForecastingOverhead Transmission LinesThermal EngineeringUrban ClimateClimate DynamicsSpan Orientations
Some of the practical limitations on the use of weather-dependent thermal rating methods for overhead transmission lines are explored. A distinction is made between weather-dependent thermal ratings for a single span and for an entire line. Based on hourly historical weather data for Rochester, NY, USA, it is demonstrated that while the probability distribution of the weather-dependent thermal rating of each span in a line is similar, the probability distribution of line ratings is dependent upon the orientation of the spans in the line. The maximum weather-dependent line ratings are found when all spans are parallel. Minimum weather-dependent line ratings are found for lines whose span orientations vary. Historical weather data are studied in order to estimate minimum predicted thermal ratings for 1 and 4 hours into the future. It is found that such minimum predicted thermal ratings are not greatly in excess of traditional static thermal line ratings.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1