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Old July 13th 18, 09:50 AM posted to uk.transport.london
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Default Electric buses at waterloo

On Fri, 13 Jul 2018 10:27:30 +0100
Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 08:57:53 on Fri, 13
Jul 2018, John Williamson remarked:
On 13/07/2018 08:09, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 22:59:39
on Thu, 12 Jul 2018, Mark Bestley remarked:


In comes 11,000 volts to two new substations on the site, which is then
dropped down to 400 volts and sent via two routes to the various
charging points around the depot.
2.5 megawatts at 400 volts is 6,250 amps! But I suppose it's only
one and a half Eurostars.

Not even a quarter of a Eurostar. They draw 16 megawatts flat out.


Only on 25kV, look again at its consumption on DC, and it's the amps I'm
highlighting anyway.


I wonder if the old eurostars have any of their DC equipment still on board?
If they do perhaps they could solve the overcrowding issues on Southern and
south eastern instead of being scrapped!


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Old July 13th 18, 10:14 AM posted to uk.transport.london
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Default Electric buses at waterloo

On 13/07/2018 10:27, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 08:57:53 on Fri, 13
Jul 2018, John Williamson remarked:


Not even a quarter of a Eurostar. They draw 16 megawatts flat out.


Only on 25kV, look again at its consumption on DC, and it's the amps I'm
highlighting anyway.


The lower power and speed restrictions on the third rail sections of the
original route was a deliberate restriction to prevent overload damage
to the ageing trackside equipment and speed related damage to the
collection shoes. As the third rail shoes have now been removed, this is
academic. They used to jog along at 65mph in the UK. accelerate to 85
mph or so for the tunnel, and then to full speed for the French and
other parts of the trip. They now do full speed along the HS1 track,
slow down to 85 for the tunnel, then accelerate again as they leave it.

The traction motors on a Eurostar are rated to draw 12 megawatts per
train at start, the garage is drawing a fraction of that. The 12
Eurostar motors are likely running at 600 volts or so, which means they
draw about 1,600 Amps each, at a megawatt a pop, but this is only of
concern to the designers and engineers. To everyone else, it's a black
box system that needs a megawatt per motor at whatever voltage and
frequency the pantograph is supplying at the time.

What's important to the grid is the input. Your 6,250 Amps for the
chargers will be split into chunks of about 200 Amps per bus (at about
600 volts, IIRC), by the distribution network. It will come into the
site at about 120 Amps per feed at 11kv.

--
Tciao for Now!

John.
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Old July 13th 18, 10:37 AM posted to uk.transport.london
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Default Electric buses at waterloo

On Fri, 13 Jul 2018 11:14:39 +0100
John Williamson wrote:
What's important to the grid is the input. Your 6,250 Amps for the
chargers will be split into chunks of about 200 Amps per bus (at about
600 volts, IIRC), by the distribution network. It will come into the
site at about 120 Amps per feed at 11kv.


Is 11KV the standard voltage for distribution within UK cities? I wonder
why they chose that particular value. Just curious...


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Old July 13th 18, 11:35 AM posted to uk.transport.london
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Default Electric buses at waterloo

In message , at 11:14:39 on Fri, 13
Jul 2018, John Williamson remarked:
The traction motors on a Eurostar are rated to draw 12 megawatts per
train at start, the garage is drawing a fraction of that. The 12
Eurostar motors are likely running at 600 volts or so, which means they
draw about 1,600 Amps each, at a megawatt a pop, but this is only of
concern to the designers and engineers. To everyone else, it's a black
box system that needs a megawatt per motor at whatever voltage and
frequency the pantograph is supplying at the time.


But the DC power supply wasn't capable of 19,200 amps!

What's important to the grid is the input. Your 6,250 Amps for the
chargers will be split into chunks of about 200 Amps per bus (at about
600 volts, IIRC),


I used the 400 volts quoted earlier (which is highly likely to be the
same stuff that you've called 415 volts; three phase). We don't know how
many blocks of chargers that'll be split into, but thirty at 200 amps
each for two buses each seems rather spaghetti-like.

by the distribution network.


It will come into the site at about 120 Amps per feed at 11kv.


The copper I'm admiring is that carrying the 6,250 amps (for however far
before branching off to individual blocks of chargers).
--
Roland Perry
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Old July 13th 18, 02:59 PM posted to uk.transport.london
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Default Electric buses at waterloo

On 13/07/2018 15:51, wrote:
240V isn't it or did it get dropped down at some point?

It used to be 240 plus or minus 5%, it's now 230 plus 10 - 0%. Not even
the transformer taps in the substations have been changed. Blame the EU.

--
Tciao for Now!

John.


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