Add Cycling Phase Window
The Add Cycling Phase window provides for inserting operating phases for the active cycling profile record in the Prediction Cycling Profile file. The following table describes the records in this window. For more information, see Entering Phase and Temperature Information.
Option
Description
Phase Name
The unique name to assign to the phase.
Phase Type
The type of thermal variation in the phase. Choices are:
Continuous/Dormant — When selected, the average thermal variation is calculated as the mean daily temperature variation that the equipment experiences each year. For equipment in environmentally controlled (benign) locations, this would amount to a variation of 0 degrees C. For outdoor equipment, the variation is the difference between the average daily high (day time) and low (night time) temperatures.
On/Off — When selected (default), the temperature variation is determined using the equations for ΔΤ required by the appropriate IEC TR 62380 or RDF 2000 component model. If the result of these calculations is less than 3 degrees C, 0 degrees C is used per the specification.
Air Temperature
The outside ambient (environmental) temperature for the phase.
System Temperature
The temperature of the system when operating in this phase.
Percent On
The percentage of time the system operates in this phase per year. The values entered in this field affect the value in Total Percent, which is read-only.
Cycles per Year
The number of thermal cycles experienced by the system in the corresponding phase each year.
Temperature Rise
The average outside daily temperature. This option is available only if Continuous/Dormant is selected for Phase Type. Continuous and dormant refer to two different types of phases that use identical equations for IEC TR 62380 or RDF 2000 calculations.
Continuous is always on and does not experience internal (system) thermal cycling.
Dormant (or storage) is never on and does not experience any internal (system) thermal cycling. Because the system temperature is constant, the only temperature stress the system might be subject to is the outside (environmental) thermal variation, such as day time and night temperatures.