electricpete
Electrical
- May 4, 2001
- 16,774
I was asked for urgent input about something but only given some vague details, So of course, I'll turn around and do the same to you guys!
This is 25kv / 13.8kv 3 winding oil winding transformer around 50MVA.
Normal oil preservation is nitrogen blanket.
At beginning of maintenance period, oil results and doble results are sat. [not sure if they took megger]
During outage electrical testing bushings were found bad. Transformer drained, bushings replaced. Gas blanket or dry air was kept on transformer at all times.
There were concerns about whether certain gaskets could withstand vacuum, so during refill (the first time) no vacuum was drawn.
[ul]
[li]Above some voltage threshhold, that is bad practice due to concern for getting bubbles in the winding. I know it is bad practice for 345KV transformers. Is it bad practice at 25kv transformers?[/li]
[/ul]
After refill, proper insulation resistance readings were not obtained. So oil was drained, vacuum drawn (successfully), circulated oil under vacuum for some period (not sure how long), and refilled under vacuum. Insulation results still bad. I think the temperature-correcteed insulation resistance are all in the neighborhood 80 megaohms to 120 megaohms (I will try to get all results for all windings to ground and to each other).
My underlying question: is it possible there are residual effects from that first refill (if indeed it's improper to refill 25kv transformer without vacuum)? ... Or should any defects/bubbles introduced during that process have been erased by the draining, circulating, and refillig under vacuum?
This is 25kv / 13.8kv 3 winding oil winding transformer around 50MVA.
Normal oil preservation is nitrogen blanket.
At beginning of maintenance period, oil results and doble results are sat. [not sure if they took megger]
During outage electrical testing bushings were found bad. Transformer drained, bushings replaced. Gas blanket or dry air was kept on transformer at all times.
There were concerns about whether certain gaskets could withstand vacuum, so during refill (the first time) no vacuum was drawn.
[ul]
[li]Above some voltage threshhold, that is bad practice due to concern for getting bubbles in the winding. I know it is bad practice for 345KV transformers. Is it bad practice at 25kv transformers?[/li]
[/ul]
After refill, proper insulation resistance readings were not obtained. So oil was drained, vacuum drawn (successfully), circulated oil under vacuum for some period (not sure how long), and refilled under vacuum. Insulation results still bad. I think the temperature-correcteed insulation resistance are all in the neighborhood 80 megaohms to 120 megaohms (I will try to get all results for all windings to ground and to each other).
My underlying question: is it possible there are residual effects from that first refill (if indeed it's improper to refill 25kv transformer without vacuum)? ... Or should any defects/bubbles introduced during that process have been erased by the draining, circulating, and refillig under vacuum?