tomatge
Industrial
- Apr 11, 2002
- 93
We recently encountered a new and interesting failure on a Sulzer 9RTA-58 engine. The initial symptom was surging of the turbocharger, requiring an investigatory strip down.
What we found was some quite severe damage to the nozzle ring and some blade tip damage on the tubine itself. We also found some unusually large pieces of metal (up to 75x50mm) within the gas inlet, which could not be attributed to any damage within the turbocharger itself.
As the strip down progressed, we eventually found the source of the problem. The engine exhaust gas reciever has an expansion joint midway along the engine. The metal heat shield for this joint had disintegrated, the exhuast flow had carried pieces through the turbocharger gas inlet casing, breaking through a heavy duty metal gid in the process. This is what caused the nozzle ring damage.
Fortunately, the larger pieces did not make in though the nozzle ring, and the turbine itself suffered only minor damage. Nonetheless, and expensive repair.
Thought you may be interested !
What we found was some quite severe damage to the nozzle ring and some blade tip damage on the tubine itself. We also found some unusually large pieces of metal (up to 75x50mm) within the gas inlet, which could not be attributed to any damage within the turbocharger itself.
As the strip down progressed, we eventually found the source of the problem. The engine exhaust gas reciever has an expansion joint midway along the engine. The metal heat shield for this joint had disintegrated, the exhuast flow had carried pieces through the turbocharger gas inlet casing, breaking through a heavy duty metal gid in the process. This is what caused the nozzle ring damage.
Fortunately, the larger pieces did not make in though the nozzle ring, and the turbine itself suffered only minor damage. Nonetheless, and expensive repair.
Thought you may be interested !