Tuxedo
Electrical
- Sep 16, 2002
- 9
We have experienced 2 failures of substation transformers in the last 6 months. We are stumped as to the root cause of these failures and I was hoping some of you tranformer experts out there might have some insight into this problem.
System description
The facility is a hydro generating plant.
The substations are double ended with 100 KVA transformers in each end.
The substations are fed via vacuum breakers at 13.8 KV
The substation secondary voltage is 480 volt.
Failure 1
Failure 1 occurred upon energizing the tranformer by closing the vacuum breaker upstream of the transformer. The transformers are aluminum and have been in service for about 25 years. This failure occured after a contractor had replaced the existing vacuum breakers with new breakers and was testing their new breakers by reenergizing the substation transformer. These transformers were energized anywhere from 10 to 20 times a year but did not fail until the breaker was changed and closed. There was no load on the transformer while it was energized. Although there was some fingerpointing at the new breakers as the root cause of this failure there was no evidence to suggest that could be the cause of the failure.
Failure 2
Happened today ( the previous failure happened on a Monday also, not sure that's significant ) Identical situation. The failure occurred when the contractor again came in to rack in his new replacement breakers and energized 1 of the transformers in a different substation. This transformer failed too! We plan on gathering some detailed forensics on this failure but again the fingerpointing is at the contractor/mfr of the breakers. And again at this point we3 don't have anything to suggest that the root cause of the failure is the breaker. Is it an incredible coincidence that we had the exact same failures in the exact same way twice? Or is there something else going on here? I should mention that after the first failure we added new snubbers to all of our transformers.
Some of the theories that have been tossed around are
- the new breakers seem to close faster & harder than our old ones. Could that be affecting the impulse voltage seen by the transformers and causing these failures? Or could there be pre-strike issues with the new breakers?
Thanks in advance for any insight.
System description
The facility is a hydro generating plant.
The substations are double ended with 100 KVA transformers in each end.
The substations are fed via vacuum breakers at 13.8 KV
The substation secondary voltage is 480 volt.
Failure 1
Failure 1 occurred upon energizing the tranformer by closing the vacuum breaker upstream of the transformer. The transformers are aluminum and have been in service for about 25 years. This failure occured after a contractor had replaced the existing vacuum breakers with new breakers and was testing their new breakers by reenergizing the substation transformer. These transformers were energized anywhere from 10 to 20 times a year but did not fail until the breaker was changed and closed. There was no load on the transformer while it was energized. Although there was some fingerpointing at the new breakers as the root cause of this failure there was no evidence to suggest that could be the cause of the failure.
Failure 2
Happened today ( the previous failure happened on a Monday also, not sure that's significant ) Identical situation. The failure occurred when the contractor again came in to rack in his new replacement breakers and energized 1 of the transformers in a different substation. This transformer failed too! We plan on gathering some detailed forensics on this failure but again the fingerpointing is at the contractor/mfr of the breakers. And again at this point we3 don't have anything to suggest that the root cause of the failure is the breaker. Is it an incredible coincidence that we had the exact same failures in the exact same way twice? Or is there something else going on here? I should mention that after the first failure we added new snubbers to all of our transformers.
Some of the theories that have been tossed around are
- the new breakers seem to close faster & harder than our old ones. Could that be affecting the impulse voltage seen by the transformers and causing these failures? Or could there be pre-strike issues with the new breakers?
Thanks in advance for any insight.