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122128881 9 months ago

Thanks for pointing this out, I've fixed the tags now. Not sure what happened here as its been years. Might have been some copy/paste mistake at one point. The toll point changed direction back in 2020 as well, so may have been something there.

163603840 10 months ago

You need to provide proper changeset description. One letter or number is not acceptable.

161778374 10 months ago

Why did you change this? The motorway end sign is inside the tunnel.

161672816 11 months ago

Welcome to OSM. Please don't start with buss routes as they require route relations. They are not as easy to do as regular elements. I have reverted both of your edits because of many mistakes.

154967760 about 1 year ago

Should add that you can clearly see in images that the low side on the transformer is on the west side as the cable tie drops into the duct along the wall. If this was a 420/3000 transformer it would have both the high and low side terminals being big.

154967760 about 1 year ago

Statnett is currently planning to build a new station roughly 500m WSW of the old one to allow for 420kV and line upgrades.

154967760 about 1 year ago

Public documents by Statnett and aerials at norgeibilder.no that we can use in OSM. Latest image will be the one shown for the preferred layer in iD. The images clearly show the 420kV line drops down to the compact switchgear and then into the reactor at the back of the bay. Statnett applied for a new 300(420)/132 transformer back in 2020. In that doc it listed two 300/132 transformers and two reactors present. The 160MVar reactor and compact switchgear has been there since the station was built I believe. At least as long as the 420kV line has existed.

123631943 about 1 year ago

Only way to know for sure is to contact Equinor directly, but I'm not sure they would respond to such a question.

123631943 about 1 year ago

Cable rating and actual operating voltage is not the same. I believe they landed on 33kV to avoid having to do heavy modifications on the platforms. Space is already limited for power handling. It seems they landed on JDR Cable Systems to provide these 66kV cables. They are designed to break if there is a problem with the mooring of the turbines to avoid pulling on the rest.

123631943 about 1 year ago

It is most likely 33k internally and then transformed to 66kV for the cables to the platforms. No wind farm I know use more than 33kV from each turbine due to size of equipment. The generators are often 690V and then a transformer at the base ups this to 33kV.

123631943 about 1 year ago

Most articles quotes 33kV that I could find. Maybe that is just the internal cabling while the cables to the platforms are at 66kV.

149841875 about 1 year ago

Where did you get the transformer rating for Skagerak 4 transformer? Also DC voltage does not equal AC voltage after conversion.

140289027 about 1 year ago

Ahh, probably the classic left hand not knowing what the right is doing. I've seen varying values used for varying companies and documents even if it is essentially the same.

140289027 about 1 year ago

Where did you find the distribution voltage for this area? The voltage regulators on the distribution lines in the area says 7620V which would mean 13.2kV L-L voltage.

152545969 about 1 year ago

Please don't mess with the bus stops in Norway. They are updated automatically and we dont use the public transportation tags. Many of them don't even have a platform so the public_transport=platform tag is wrong.

159143526 about 1 year ago

Har no fiksa alle valideringsfeil i området. Ver så snill å ikkje lag meir krøll er du snill.

159143526 about 1 year ago

Trur du må stoppe og redigere landcover til du forstår relasjonar og kan bruke desse. Du er på veg å rasere heile området med masse feil.

154967760 about 1 year ago

This is not a 420kV transformer. It is connected to the 300 and 132kV and has a third winding at 17kV that used to be connected to some capacitor banks.

158989735 about 1 year ago

That voltage may not be accurate. The AC voltage after converting from DC to AC is never 1:1. That is why I removed it in my edit. You have to ask the operator or manufacturer as this will vary from station to station. The most common to use is 0.636 as the average and 0.707 for RMS. So most likely the voltage is around 500kV, but it still purely guesswork.

155526192 over 1 year ago

There are different school of thought here unfortunately. Some want a value for every possible tag instead of using a default value if missing. Tagging with every key and value available in OSM will lead to a lot of tags per object.