controlnovice
Electrical
- Jul 28, 2004
- 976
We just migrated to a new DCS system that has Isolated Thermocouple Cards with Cold Junction Compensation built in. We are using Type J thermocouples.
During a cold snap (in Chicago), after about 2 months running on the new system, our operators noticed the process temperature was much lower than it should be. The temperatures in the DCS were reading about 20C below the actual. This could have been happening all along, but it took the cold snap to be noticed.
We thought the DCS was too cold (no actual temperature taken), as the room in not insulated, and the heater was not working. So, we brought in some temporary heat. They left it overnight (process was shutdown), came in the next morning to find the DCS room at 40C! The process temperatures in the DCS were reading 30C higher than actual.
Between the TC and the DCS, there are three junction boxes. They took a reading at the first one, closest to the TC, and found the reading was the same as the local gauge. The second termination in the second junction box also read the same as the local gauge. They went to the third junction box, and the reading was 13C higher than the local gauge. Note that the room temperature was no longer at 40C either.
The cable between the 2nd and 3rd junction boxes is Type J cable. The length is about 80ft, with 65ft outdoors in conduit, and 15ft indoors.
We are told all cable sections are Type J cable (I'm not on-site to verify). If one of these other cable sections were different (not Type J), is it possible this is the error we see?
Why do we see the temperature difference/error? Do you need additional information to answer?
______________________________________________________________________________
This is normally the space where people post something insightful.
During a cold snap (in Chicago), after about 2 months running on the new system, our operators noticed the process temperature was much lower than it should be. The temperatures in the DCS were reading about 20C below the actual. This could have been happening all along, but it took the cold snap to be noticed.
We thought the DCS was too cold (no actual temperature taken), as the room in not insulated, and the heater was not working. So, we brought in some temporary heat. They left it overnight (process was shutdown), came in the next morning to find the DCS room at 40C! The process temperatures in the DCS were reading 30C higher than actual.
Between the TC and the DCS, there are three junction boxes. They took a reading at the first one, closest to the TC, and found the reading was the same as the local gauge. The second termination in the second junction box also read the same as the local gauge. They went to the third junction box, and the reading was 13C higher than the local gauge. Note that the room temperature was no longer at 40C either.
The cable between the 2nd and 3rd junction boxes is Type J cable. The length is about 80ft, with 65ft outdoors in conduit, and 15ft indoors.
We are told all cable sections are Type J cable (I'm not on-site to verify). If one of these other cable sections were different (not Type J), is it possible this is the error we see?
Why do we see the temperature difference/error? Do you need additional information to answer?
______________________________________________________________________________
This is normally the space where people post something insightful.