What Is A Voltage Dip?
What Is A Voltage Dip?
A voltage dip also referred to as voltage sag, can affect the operation of equipment such as the electronics and other
sensitive equipment connected to the grid. The effect varies from equipment to another and depends on the severity
of the dip, its duration, magnitude and ability of the equipment to withstand the voltage reduction.
A dip is said to occur when a drop to between 10 and 90 percent of the normal value occurs during 0.5 cycles and
lasting for up to 1 minute. Dips are classified according to their magnitude and duration and may be one of the
following:
Instantaneous last between 0.5 and 30 cycles which translates to between 10 and 600 ms in a 50Hz supply system
Momentary 30 cycles and 3 seconds
Temporary 3 seconds to 1 minute
Most dips only last between 0.5 cycles to 1 second; longer durations may be a sign of severe faults in the system and
can lead to bigger problems.
In addition to the magnitude and duration, the other attributes used in defining dips are the phase jump and point on
wave.
Fig1: Voltage dips according to IEEE Std. 1159-1995 (2) – Image Source
A voltage dip is does not interrupt the power supply and most of them lasts for less than one tenth of a second. The
dips are either from the distribution networks or from in-house equipment. The disturbances in distribution lines
caused by weather conditions, lightening, vegetation, excavation, third party interference damages.
The in-house causes are due to the switching on of high-current equipment such as air conditioners, microwave,
furnace fans, hair driers, motors etc.
The dip affects computers and other sensitive electronics equipment in various ways based on the dip characteristic.
The response of electronic equipment whether using regulated or unregulated power supplies can be improved to
withstand voltage dips by the use of a large hold-up capacitor.