Hi Tom,

On 12/03/14 18:15, Tom Knox wrote:
So we know there are deviations in line freq. But it seems strange in
this era of very accurate and inexpensive freq references.

May seem strange, yes.

How much is related to the generation? It seems in this era of
switching supplies and other complex loads that even if the power were
perfect at the generator the phase/freq could vary widely across the
grid as different parts of the sine wave are loaded in a non linear
fashion. And could a small digital signal be added to the smart grid
that would control switching supplies to correct rather then degrade
the grid signal?

The rotating transformers will lag different amounts depending on the load. You balance the frequency by balacing the generation with the load. A higher load than generation causes frequency to go down. A higher generation than load causes frequency to go down. The generators is then within their synchronous region be running synchronously, but not quite synchronous, their phase angle may shift depending on load and strength of the network. When phase diverge, the network fall apart, not often without a black-out as a result. Remember the 2003 NE blackout?

On top of that, there is inter-area modes with oscillations, there is forced oscillations (such as from broken generators), control algorithm re-balancing and then all the nice transients from transformer steppings, cap tripping and tripping breakers for a line. Then the load changing patterns.

There is a fair amount of GPS clocks being in use, but it doesn't change the behaviour of the grid that directly. It is used as reference to measure phase-vectors, frequency and ROCOF (rate of change of frequency, what we call linear frequency drift) which is used as input for the control of the power-grid.

PS. Where are you, no Tom Knox in Knoxville ;-)

Cheers,
Magnus
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