7th Mar 2018, 9:51 pm | #41 |
Tetrode
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: East Lothian, Scotland, UK.
Posts: 66
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
Andrew, yes, I remember that one, although the requirement for an average over the 24hr period I wasn't aware of.
Here's another shorter video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UTM2Ck6XWHg |
7th Mar 2018, 10:10 pm | #42 | |
Nonode
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: North Somerset, UK.
Posts: 2,130
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
Quote:
I can't see why at a time of gas scarcity, that relatively inefficient OCGT plant would be run for many hours, whilst more efficient CCGT plant was idle. It may have been preferable to burn oil at relatively low efficiency rather than to burn gas at greater efficiency. |
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7th Mar 2018, 10:30 pm | #43 |
Tetrode
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: East Lothian, Scotland, UK.
Posts: 66
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
Unfortunately it has less to do with efficiency, more to do with the bid price that the generator has submitted into the trading system. There are can be other reasons why a generator will run more expensive plant such as outage requirements, proving runs, statutory tests etc.
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7th Mar 2018, 10:34 pm | #44 |
Octode
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Belper Derbyshire
Posts: 1,936
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
Last week we ran all of our gas and Diesel engines every day. The buy price for electricity went very high and on one of the days we ran them for 17 hours continuously. We certainly got through a lot of diesel!! (Approximately 100,000 litres!!) The grid frequency is the same all over the UK and all of the rotating alternators speed is governed by the grid frequency as they are all synchronous machines.
The national grid have to be very careful about the maximum and minimum frequency as well as the rate of change of frequency as all of our STOR power generation sites have protection relays called G59 which will trip the site offline should the frequency deviation go outside the prescribed limits. This is to prevent a situation called island mode where the power station can continue generating into the local grid when the power is cut to the local substation. This could cause a sudden voltage and frequency increase damaging equipment or making equipment being worked on live that should be dead. The grid frequency is constantly changing slightly as demand and generation change throughout the day. The slightest increase in load slows it down whereas a slight increase in generation increases frequency. It is a fine balance to keep it as close to 50hz as possible. Christopher Capener
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7th Mar 2018, 11:08 pm | #45 |
Tetrode
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: East Lothian, Scotland, UK.
Posts: 66
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
This may illustrate some of the reasons. I assume that there is a similar scheme in place for this year. Towards the end of my career in the industry I had noticed that the numbers of "Notification of Inadequate System Margins" (NISM's) had gone from zero in the 2000's to 3 or 4 a year by the time I retired in 2013. This has frightened the Government into action!
https://www.theguardian.com/environm...this-christmas |
8th Mar 2018, 12:02 am | #46 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Staffordshire Moorlands, UK.
Posts: 5,276
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
I saw that documentary, if it was the same one, from the national grid control centre. Lots of LCD monitors and guys in shirt & tie scanning the tv schedules and keeping an eye on the big LED frequency meter. At one point the chappie told the reporter he'd have to 'bring another power station online soon' as the frequency was getting too low; apparently the drop was a good indicator of more power needed.
I assume power generation works in a similar way to other supply & demand systems (such as compressed air) where there's a hardcore of bulk supply for coarse adjustments and then a smaller, more easily variable set of generators that take up the slack to fine tune everything up or down.
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8th Mar 2018, 12:18 am | #47 |
Tetrode
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: East Lothian, Scotland, UK.
Posts: 66
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
Good way of looking at it, the hardcore or base load stations being the nuclear fleet and to an extent coal and gas fired stations. If you look at the monthly graphs on the link below you will see the variance in energy supplies.
http://www.gridwatch.templar.co.uk/ |
8th Mar 2018, 12:27 am | #48 |
Pentode
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Liverpool, Merseyside, UK.
Posts: 149
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
In the late 70's we had a differential time indicator in the grid control room.
Basically a synchronous clock and a gents pulse clock both feeding to a differential gear with an indicator. the control room staff tried to keep the error below 1 min per day if I remember correctly (long time ago) Ian |
8th Mar 2018, 2:30 am | #49 |
Heptode
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Birmingham, West Midlands, UK.
Posts: 708
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
We are led to believe that time is this wondrous thing holding together the universe and that if we reach the speed of light we can go back and forth in time etc.. but I think these events just prove that time is bunk...a figment of the human imagination based on mechanical observations, first of the Earth going around the Sun and then invention of the clock, photograph etc. If the mother of all clocks-the most accurate clock in the world breaks down. What do we measure as the point for starting it up again? There is nothing in nature, we have to make it up.
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8th Mar 2018, 6:09 am | #50 | |
Moderator
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
Quote:
Eeeee! Tha had a proper synchroscope, not just three light bulbs? Luxury, lad! For those that don't already know, you can see grid frequency, loading and sources data here: http://www.gridwatch.templar.co.uk The national grid is completely synchronised (except for a major disaster scale fault) so a mechanical analogy would be a drive shaft connecting all generators and all loads. If generation can't make the load demands, the RPM (frequency) drops, and consequentially the voltage drops which gives less power to SOME loads. Low frequency triggers some spare generating capacity into action, much lower frequency and more expensive generators are brought on-line. The grid frequency is both an indicator of the availability versus demand balance, and it is the command structure. Switch-mode PSUs in loads don't reduce power demand when the supply voltage falls, they increase demanded current to compensate. This increases ohmic losses, drops their supply volts a bit and then compensate for that with even more current demand, so their power demand increases with falling supply volts, creating a destabilising influence. The drive for energy saving has meant more SMPS, more 'smart motors' and has given us a less-stable network, add in wind fluctuations and the quality of our supply is less than it used to be. David
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8th Mar 2018, 7:08 am | #51 |
Nonode
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: North Somerset, UK.
Posts: 2,130
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
To add to the points already made regarding frequency control, any sudden and severe drop in frequency also triggers the automatic starting of gas turbine and diesel generating plant.
If the frequency remains low, then areas are automatically blacked out by frequency relays in substations. Such drastic measures are only taken if the grid frequency drops to about 48.8 cycles, well below the normal lower limit of 49.5 cycles. IIRC this last happened some years ago and resulted in large scale but brief power cuts. There was nothing exceptional about demand at the time, the problem was caused by the almost simultaneous tripping of two large generating units. The frequency remained below the legal limit of 49.5 cycles for about 10 minutes. The national grid are required to have a margin to cover for the largest reasonably foreseeable failure, but if two failures occur at almost the same time, not much can be done. |
8th Mar 2018, 9:04 am | #52 |
Heptode
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Oxfordshire, UK.
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
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8th Mar 2018, 12:35 pm | #53 |
Heptode
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: Boston, Lincolnshire, UK.
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
Am I right in assuming these frequency variations, at this order of magnitude, are also sufficient to noticeably(*) impact the speed of AC synchronous drive turntables, e.g., a Linn LP-12 (pre-Valhalla) ?
(*) By noticeably, I mean audibly. |
8th Mar 2018, 1:48 pm | #54 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Leominster, Herefordshire, UK.
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
A semitone is about a 6% frequency change, so 2% or 1 Hz in 50Hz might well be audible- especially if it happened during a sustained note in a musical piece.
The fat lady's voice might wobble a bit!
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8th Mar 2018, 1:58 pm | #55 |
Nonode
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: North Somerset, UK.
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
I suspect that most listeners would not notice most frequency disturbances, but yes a keen listener would notice bad mains frequency variations.
In years gone by, cinema projectors were tied to the line frequency, and cinema staff with a good watch or clock could just about detect that the actual running time of a film could vary by a minute or so. |
8th Mar 2018, 2:06 pm | #56 | |
Nonode
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Location: Dukinfield, Cheshire, UK.
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
Quote:
Who was it that said that?
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Andy G1HBE. |
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8th Mar 2018, 3:16 pm | #57 | |
Dekatron
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Location: Lynton, N. Devon, UK.
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
Quote:
However, assuming these are constant, yes a small frequency change in the mains could still manifest itself in a minute or so variation in duration. I recall Adrian Hope (Barry Fox) in an article, pointing out that crystal-locked turntable motors might actually be unnecessarily more accurate than the records they would be playing, as recording lathes were driven by off-line AC motors so could vary by the supply frequency. Dunno! But He did a good job, time (or frequency) is the quantity which we've been able to measure with the best precision of anything! |
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8th Mar 2018, 3:27 pm | #58 |
Guest
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
Mains clock 3 minutes slow, I wonder if they will insert cycles to correct it when the load goes down?
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8th Mar 2018, 3:34 pm | #59 | |
Octode
Join Date: Dec 2017
Location: Morden, Surrey, UK.
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
Quote:
Any variation in mains frequency is likely to be quite slow so not easily heard. Also bear in mind that TV runs 24 fps feature films at 25 fps so more than 4% fast yet no one seems to notice. |
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8th Mar 2018, 4:47 pm | #60 | |
Retired Dormant Member
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Re: Electric clocks running slow warning
Quote:
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