jrcagle
Petroleum
- Feb 22, 2013
- 2
There are three ungrounded, 1/8" OD type J thermocouples in a single pipe well operating at ~690 degF. One of them is reading ~15 degF lower than the other two. We're being asked to troubleshoot the coolest thermocouple to see if the temperature deviation is real or not. There is no indication the pipe well is compromised but we're not going to attempt replacement or removal of the thermocouples until the vessel is out of service due to high pressure.
We tested the mV reading from the thermocouple and it matches the temperature indicated to DCS. We simulated a mV reading to DCS and it read correctly. So far so good.
I also asked our techs to check insulation resistance between the lead wires and the sheath for all three thermocouples. All three read ~110 ohms. I expected a much, much higher resistance since they're ungrounded. These were checked with a battery power multi-meter rather than a megger. Do I need to megger test to get accurate insulation resistance?
Any other troubleshooting steps I can do?
We tested the mV reading from the thermocouple and it matches the temperature indicated to DCS. We simulated a mV reading to DCS and it read correctly. So far so good.
I also asked our techs to check insulation resistance between the lead wires and the sheath for all three thermocouples. All three read ~110 ohms. I expected a much, much higher resistance since they're ungrounded. These were checked with a battery power multi-meter rather than a megger. Do I need to megger test to get accurate insulation resistance?
Any other troubleshooting steps I can do?