Talk:Low voltage ride through

Duration
For the uninformed, the article does not give an appreciation that the duration of a fault event is in the scale of milliseconds. Perhaps some further explanation regarding to that aspect. --Davagh (talk) 17:22, 17 December 2014 (UTC)

Under Voltage vs. Low Voltage
Low voltage is defined by Electropedia as follows

low voltage (abbreviation: LV)

a set of voltage levels used for the distribution of electricity and whose upper limit is generally accepted to be 1 000 V a.c.

Therefore, 'low voltage' is not the precise term, as FRT capability means e.g. to run through a voltage dip of ~150 ms length, but not down below 1000 V a.c. but rather something like 30% of nominal voltage: If the nominal voltage is 10 kV, that means you need an immunity for voltage dips down to 3000 V which is not low voltage. 'Under voltage' is the correct term, as it describes a threshold (eg. pu = 0,3).

Regards, --Gunnar (talk) 10:47, 17 December 2015 (UTC)

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