Dashboard PE Power Exam Prep Protection Overcurrent & coordination Overcurrent protection & TCC coordination

Overcurrent protection & TCC coordination

ANSI 50/51, IEEE TCC curves, pickup + time-dial settings, and coordination of cascaded protective devices with CTI.

Sophomore ~12 min

Step 1 — ANSI 50 (instantaneous) and 51 (time-overcurrent) elements

0.55×
curve CTI 0.30 s coord

Reference notes

Use Next → on the narrator above to step through overcurrent protection and time-current-characteristic coordination — the most common protection topic on the PE Power exam.

ANSI device numbers

TCC curve mathematics

The IEEE C37.112 standard inverse curve family is:

t = TD · ( A / (Mp − 1) + B )

where:

CurveABpUsed with
Moderately inverse (MI)0.05150.1140.02General feeders
Inverse (NI)5.950.1802Default for line/feeder protection
Very inverse (VI)3.880.09632Tight coordination with downstream
Extremely inverse (EI)5.670.03522Pairing with fuses (matches I²t melt curve)

Setting the pickup

Pickup is the current below which the time-overcurrent element will never trip. Standard practice:

Setting the time-dial

Once pickups are chosen, set the time-dial (TD) so the upstream device's curve sits the required CTI above the downstream device's curve at the maximum fault current. Procedure:

  1. Pick the most-downstream device's curve shape and pickup. Set its TD to give minimum acceptable trip time at the maximum fault.
  2. For the next device upstream: compute the downstream device's trip time at the max-fault current it would see. Add the CTI. Solve the TCC equation for the TD that gives this total trip time at the same current.
  3. Repeat all the way to the utility interface.

Coordination time interval (CTI)

The minimum vertical gap between adjacent TCC curves at the maximum fault current. Typical values:

The CTI budget breaks down roughly as: breaker opening time (5 cycles ≈ 0.083 s for MV vacuum), relay overtravel (~0.05 s for electromechanical, ~0 for digital), and a safety margin (~0.15 s).

Coordination example

Three devices in series: MCC feeder → plant main → utility incomer. At the maximum 3-φ fault current at the MCC bus:

Each layer of protection provides backup for the layer below — if the MCC breaker fails, the plant main clears the fault 0.30 s later; if both fail, the utility breaker clears 0.30 s after that. This is "fully selective" coordination.

Take-away. 50 = instantaneous, 51 = inverse-time. TCC equation: t = TD·(A/(Mp−1) + B), M = I/I_pickup. Pickup at 1.25–1.5× load. Time-dial chosen so each upstream curve sits CTI above the downstream curve at the maximum fault current. CTI typically 0.3 s. Use EI for fuse coordination, NI for general feeder, VI for tight coordination, MI for slowly-rising overloads. Add 67 for ring/parallel topologies.

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