Product Overview
The 745-W2-P5-G5-HI (745W2P5G5HI) is a safety-critical, high-speed microprocessor-based Transformer Protection Relay engineered by General Electric within the legacy 745 Transformer Protection System line. Custom-built to optimize utility asset lifespans and govern severe electrical parameters, this hardware unit manages full differential coordination across two-winding transformer setups. High-capacity continuous-process industrial infrastructures—including heavy manufacturing mills, thermodynamic power plants, and primary grid substations—rely on the 745-W2-P5-G5-HI (745W2P5G5HI) to monitor volatile electrical faults, overexcitation scenarios, and thermal overloads. By incorporating specialized protection loops like restricted ground fault isolation and adaptive underfrequency blocking, the relay clears downstream fault currents within milliseconds. This rapid isolation shields massive step-up transformers from permanent dielectric damage, maintains system grid synchronization, and mitigates expensive plant unprogrammed downtime.
Model Suffix Breakdown
The precise operating envelopes, input capacities, and power constraints of the 745-W2-P5-G5-HI protection unit are classified through its alphanumeric ordering matrix.
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745 Base Framework: Identifies the foundational Multilin high-speed transformer management and diagnostics architecture.
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W2 Option Selection: Specifies a native system design configured for a 2-winding per phase transformer topology.
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P5 Phase Input Rating: Dictates that the primary phase current inputs are factory-calibrated for a standard 5 A secondary current transformer (CT) line (Winding 1 = 5 A, Winding 2 = 5 A, Winding 3 = 5 A where applicable).
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G5 Ground Input Rating: Sets the specialized ground current relay input channel thresholds to Winding 1/2 = 5 A and Winding 2/3 = 5 A for dedicated zero-sequence fault tracing.
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HI Power Configuration: Represents the high control power variant, accepting wide operational input windows of 90 to 300 VDC or 70 to 265 VAC to maintain circuit integrity during severe substation battery line drops.
Technical Performance & Asset Index
| Protection Metric |
Certified Engineering Specification Standard |
| Model Designation |
745-W2-P5-G5-HI |
| Brand Manufacturer |
GE Multilin / GE Grid Solutions (GE Vernova) |
| Control System Line |
745 Transformer Protection System |
| Module Classification |
High-Speed Microprocessor Transformer Relay |
| Transformer Configurations |
2-Winding Per Phase Topographies |
| Phase Current Rating |
5 A Secondary Input Profile (P5 Selection) |
| Ground Current Rating |
5 A Secondary Input Profile (G5 Selection) |
| Voltage Input Window |
60 to 120 VAC Nominal Relay Ingestion |
| High Control Power (HI) |
90 to 300 VDC / 70 to 265 VAC (48 to 62 Hz Window) |
| Overload Current Withstand |
1 second at 80 times rated current / Continuous at 3 times |
| Localized Visual Interface |
40-Character Backlit LCD Screen with Front Keypad |
| Physical Card Size |
9 in H x 7.125 in D x 7 in W |
| Hardware Shipping Weight |
4.8 kg (approx. 10.58 lbs) |
| Operating Ambient Window |
-40 to +60 deg C (-40 to +140 deg F) Thermal Frame |
| Storage Temperature Limits |
-40 to +80 deg C (-40 to +176 deg F) Maximum Bounds |
| Humidity Tolerances |
Up to 90 percent Non-Condensing Environmental Envelope |
Substation Grid Protection & Software FAQs
What functional advantages does the HI control power selection offer over the alternative LO option?
The HI control power framework allows the 745-W2-P5-G5-HI to interface directly with major high-voltage utility battery banks, running steadily on any input between 90 to 300 VDC or 70 to 265 VAC. Conversely, the LO control power option is restricted to low-voltage infrastructure nodes, operating only within narrower windows of 20 to 60 VDC or 20 to 48 VAC, making the HI model much more resilient against substation grid voltage dips.
How do substation protection teams connect PC hardware to download files or modify active setpoints?
The relay provides separate physical interfaces depending on your networking requirements. For immediate point-to-point programming, technicians connect via the front-panel RS232 port directly to a laptop running the EnerVista 745 software suite. For multi-relay networks inside a control cabinet, the rear-panel RS485 or RS422 serial links must be used to daisy-chain telemetry back to the master SCADA terminal.
Can this specific model configuration run native Ethernet protocols directly over an optical network?
No. In the GE Multilin 745 matrix, native Ethernet capability requires an optional communication board indicated by a "T" character within the final suffix string. Because this unit is an unmapped standard serial configuration (745-W2-P5-G5-HI), network communication over Ethernet requires an external serial-to-Ethernet protocol converter or a hardware upgrade to a T-spec variant.
Engineering & Installation Guide
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Current Transformer (CT) Grounding and Terminal Landings:
When landing heavy secondary current transformer conductors onto the P5 and G5 terminal blocks at the rear of the 745 housing, verify that all CT circuit commons are tied together and bonded to the station ground grid at a single point. Ensure all screw terminals are torqued tightly to a maximum of 1.4 N-m (12.4 inch-lbs). Open-circuiting an active CT primary circuit during live transformer operations will generate lethal voltage spikes, destroying the internal analog matching transformers of the relay.
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Serial Noise Isolation and Shielded Wire Guidelines:
When configuring the rear RS485 or RS422 communication links across multiple relays, use high-grade twisted-pair shielded cable with a characteristic impedance of 120 ohms. Ground the communication shield drain wire at the master SCADA receiver panel only. Do not ground the shield at multiple relays along the serial bus, preventing localized ground potential differences from injecting communication noise into the serial registers.
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Thermal Management and Panel Airflow Constraints:
The 745 relay is fully certified to operate within an extended ambient thermal window of -40 to +60 deg C. When flush-mounting the 9-inch high enclosure into standard switchgear panels, ensure that adjacent heat-generating components—such as power transducers or interposing trip relays—maintain a minimal physical clearance gap of 10 cm. Check that the ventilation louvers on the chassis remain clear to allow passive air convection and prevent localized hotspots from accelerating component wear.