rkflash
Electrical
- Jan 26, 2011
- 4
Hi All,
The company I work for has been experiencing chronic violent failures of type VWVE oil-filled vacuum reclosers. We have approximately 60 of the same model recloser in-service for over 20 years and in the last 14 months we have had 5 fail catastrophically. To date 4-of-5 failures have been gasket failure between the tank and head cover resulting in an extremely hazardous upward-and-outward spray of flaming oil. The 5th actually blew the bottom of the tank out.
We are in the process of replacing them all with solid-dielectric type reclosers but in the interim we have no confidence in the units remaining in-service.
We are hoping to come up with a temporary portable barrier solution that we can send along with our crews whenever they need to work in the vicinity of one of the at-risk units, which they would assemble on-site to surround the unit and block the gush of burning oil should a failure occur while they are on-site. We are currently looking into some galvanized steel barriers or kevlar curtains but I'm wondering if anyone has had a similar experience with equipment that is at-risk of catastrophic failure and what did you do to protect employee safety should they need to get close to it?
The company I work for has been experiencing chronic violent failures of type VWVE oil-filled vacuum reclosers. We have approximately 60 of the same model recloser in-service for over 20 years and in the last 14 months we have had 5 fail catastrophically. To date 4-of-5 failures have been gasket failure between the tank and head cover resulting in an extremely hazardous upward-and-outward spray of flaming oil. The 5th actually blew the bottom of the tank out.
We are in the process of replacing them all with solid-dielectric type reclosers but in the interim we have no confidence in the units remaining in-service.
We are hoping to come up with a temporary portable barrier solution that we can send along with our crews whenever they need to work in the vicinity of one of the at-risk units, which they would assemble on-site to surround the unit and block the gush of burning oil should a failure occur while they are on-site. We are currently looking into some galvanized steel barriers or kevlar curtains but I'm wondering if anyone has had a similar experience with equipment that is at-risk of catastrophic failure and what did you do to protect employee safety should they need to get close to it?