GMacD
Marine/Ocean
- Dec 3, 2007
- 1
Just got home from a ship where we had an intermittent
electrical phenomenon which caused me some concern.
The ship has 3 Diesel Alternators (910Kw/1500A each)
Occasionally during periods when all 3 generators were
on the board and load sharing, No1 Generator would
experience an increase in current 200-300A higher than
the other 2 generators which remained steady,the increase
did not coincide with any load change visible from the
governors as they all remain steady. After a short period
the current will drop back to the same level as the other
generators who do not pick up any of the mysterious extra
current which just vanishes.
The offline voltage of the alternators is trimmed to
456VAC which provides the switchboard with 450VAC online.
The phase angle is 0.8 and the majority of the load is
inductive from AC induction motors.
My concern was that the AVR was on the way out,
I've priced a new one and been quoted £1400,
I'd like some advice just incase i'm going down the
wrong road with this problem.
Any help from an electrical brain would be greatly
appriated by one of your marine engineering brethren
electrical phenomenon which caused me some concern.
The ship has 3 Diesel Alternators (910Kw/1500A each)
Occasionally during periods when all 3 generators were
on the board and load sharing, No1 Generator would
experience an increase in current 200-300A higher than
the other 2 generators which remained steady,the increase
did not coincide with any load change visible from the
governors as they all remain steady. After a short period
the current will drop back to the same level as the other
generators who do not pick up any of the mysterious extra
current which just vanishes.
The offline voltage of the alternators is trimmed to
456VAC which provides the switchboard with 450VAC online.
The phase angle is 0.8 and the majority of the load is
inductive from AC induction motors.
My concern was that the AVR was on the way out,
I've priced a new one and been quoted £1400,
I'd like some advice just incase i'm going down the
wrong road with this problem.
Any help from an electrical brain would be greatly
appriated by one of your marine engineering brethren