Station power reliability (continuity and quality) is a result of systems planning and design, as well as equipment design and quality.
Three basic configurations are used to ensure station power reliability:
AC-DC converters (rectifiers), batteries and DC-DC converters.
Two AC sources including a generator and / or UPS with prime power.
Hybrid of A and B with critical DC power feeding line redundant, on-line or standby inverter(s) (DC-AC).
Bear in mind that generally, unit equipment reliability decreases as its electronic sophistication and number of components increases. This fact is the basis for the widely used parts-count reliability assessment methods originally developed by the military and now used in many industries. Equipment field serviceability also decreases with increasing complexity.
Staticon power conversion equipment designs are based on natural convection cooling, magnetic control and a minimum of electronic modules rendering them optimally reliable, accessible and field serviceable.
Redundancy enhances power system reliability by bridging prime power outages and unit equipment repair periods.
Parallel redundancy is the use of multiple units of active, on-line, energized power supply equipment. There is no switching of any sources / equipment involved. Parallel redundancy results in the sharing of load between active units of power conversion equipment.
Standby redundancy is the use of alternate power source / equipment units that are switched in to supply load power during prime power or on-line equipment failure
Warm standby redundancy is the use of energized, alternate power source / equipment that is unloaded (idle) until the load is switched over to it.
Cold standby redundancy is the use of de-energized, alternate power sources and / or equipment that is unloaded until the load is switched over to it.