TimMol wrote:
This 2s requirement for carrying a short circuit current (may be referred to as the short time current rating) is presumably selected to co-ordinate with the maximum permissible tripping delay for 4.76 kV - 72kV circuit breakers in accordance with IEEE Std. C37.04. The maximum permissible tripping delay for circuit breakers rated > 100kV is normally 1s. 2s /1s duration is also used to size ground conductors. Very conservative but readers should note that most utilities factor this into their specs. TimMol
As Jim said the two seconds here refers to IEEE 1584, not The ANSI C37 series.
Generally this may be true for opening time when there is no specific delay and would apply to say the first zone in a distance relay or say differential protection but it's not true in general with time overcurrent coordination because each layer of relays needs a little more than one "opening time" delay to achieve coordination. With medium voltage the slowest breakers are around 0.2 seconds so in years past the recommended delay for coordination was 0.2-0.3 seconds although today that can be reduced to as little as around 0.1 second or less. At 115 kV+ when large air break circuit switchers are used and transient recovery voltage resistors are a must, switching can last 1 second or more so unless coordination is done with schemes other than time delays, relay operation can easily exceed 2 seconds.