Dashboard PE Power Exam Prep Electric Power Devices Transformers Transformer tap changers — NLTC and OLTC

Transformer tap changers — NLTC and OLTC

On-load and off-circuit tap changers, the diverter/selector make-before-break mechanism, ±10 % range in 16 steps, why taps live in the HV winding, and OLTC control with line-drop compensation.

Junior ~10 min

Step 1 — Why tap changers: keep V_LV in band as supply V and load change

0.55×
type tap V_LV

Reference notes

Use Next → for the practical engineering of transformer tap changers: NLTC vs OLTC, the diverter/selector mechanism, typical ratings, why taps sit on the HV winding, and the line-drop compensation that makes OLTC regulation match the load-center voltage.

Why tap changers exist

Grid voltages vary. Regulators require customer voltage stay within ~±5 % of nominal. Without taps, you'd need to design every transformer ratio assuming the average supply voltage and tolerate excursions outside the band. Tap changers add small (typically 1.25 %) adjustments to the transformer ratio in real time, absorbing supply variations so V_LV stays centered.

NLTC — No-Load Tap Changer (off-circuit)

OLTC — On-Load Tap Changer

The workhorse for any transformer that must regulate voltage continuously.

Where the taps live

Almost always on the HV winding:

Exception: regulating autotransformers may have taps in the series (middle) winding between two voltage levels.

OLTC control — ANSI 90 voltage-regulator relay + LDC

The OLTC is driven by a tap-changer relay (ANSI device 90) that compares LV bus voltage to a setpoint and commands tap changes when outside a deadband (typically nominal ±1 %).

For transformers feeding long distribution feeders, the bus voltage and feeder-end voltage are different (because of feeder R + X drop with load current). Line-Drop Compensation (LDC) adds R + X simulation in the voltage-sense path:

Vsense = Vbus − Iload · (RLDC + jXLDC)

R_LDC (also written R_lin in some vendor manuals) and X_LDC / X_lin are set to match the feeder's R and X out to the load center. With LDC, the relay regulates the FEEDER-END voltage, not just the bus.

Additional control features on modern numerical relays:

Tap-changer lifecycle

Take-away. NLTC = manual, de-energized, ±5 %. OLTC = automatic, under-load via selector + diverter (make-before-break), ±10 %. Taps live in HV winding for current and resolution reasons. ANSI 90 relay with LDC regulates the feeder-end voltage. Pair with fast SVC/STATCOM for transient response since OLTC mechanical cycling is limited to ~50/day.

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