mbk2k3
Electrical
- Nov 18, 2010
- 97
Hey folks,
So I've been reading lots of presentations/IEEE papers trying to find out the root cause of a transformer failure.
The brand new transformer was commissioned less than a year ago, all protection trip signals for high temperature and low oil levels were wired to a protection relay and commissioned. the temperature and oil level alarms were also wired into a PLC and they don't show any change in state either.
I'm attaching the DGA results screenshot here.
What confuses me is this:
[ul]
[li]The Ratio Tests (Rogers Method/Basic Ratio Method) point to High Energy Arcing Discharge.[/li]
[li]The Key Gas Method points to Electrical High Energy discharge as well, but potentially also a "thermal oil" fault type as well.[/li]
[/ul]
Can a high energy arcing discharge occurr randomly out of nowhere without being preceded by a thermal type overload? Or was there a long term overtemperature condition as well that ended up resulting in an internal arc? The methane levels are really low, and I believe if there was an overloading condition the methane levels would have been higher....
I checked the metering data and there doesn't seem to be any overloading condition in the past few months or even the day the failure occured.
So I've been reading lots of presentations/IEEE papers trying to find out the root cause of a transformer failure.
The brand new transformer was commissioned less than a year ago, all protection trip signals for high temperature and low oil levels were wired to a protection relay and commissioned. the temperature and oil level alarms were also wired into a PLC and they don't show any change in state either.
I'm attaching the DGA results screenshot here.
What confuses me is this:
[ul]
[li]The Ratio Tests (Rogers Method/Basic Ratio Method) point to High Energy Arcing Discharge.[/li]
[li]The Key Gas Method points to Electrical High Energy discharge as well, but potentially also a "thermal oil" fault type as well.[/li]
[/ul]
Can a high energy arcing discharge occurr randomly out of nowhere without being preceded by a thermal type overload? Or was there a long term overtemperature condition as well that ended up resulting in an internal arc? The methane levels are really low, and I believe if there was an overloading condition the methane levels would have been higher....
I checked the metering data and there doesn't seem to be any overloading condition in the past few months or even the day the failure occured.