dkjfnvfd
Electrical
- Apr 18, 2020
- 29
Morning all,
I got called into work yesterday to attend a breakdown on a Siemens MasterGuard 125 kVA machine from 1999..
It had failed overnight and automatically switched itself to external bypass. The external bypass has a separate feed to the internal bypass.
During investigation I found that the current on the internal bypass matched the outgoing current from the UPS to the load (60 - 75A on RYB phases), however there were much larger currents (80 - 95A on each phase) going into the rectifier.
We'll never know why that was since there was no desire to fix as it was a machine from 1999, so we just put it into external bypass and have scheduled a replacement. I have been telling them to replace it for a long time, but whatever.
Anybody have any idea what those rectifier currents were doing? 90A is well within the capacity of the UPS however I'm not sure it's designed to sink all of that as heat through the components.
I confirmed that the current was no longer present after the UPS was isolated, so I don't think they were circulating which was a possibility that I considered.
I got called into work yesterday to attend a breakdown on a Siemens MasterGuard 125 kVA machine from 1999..
It had failed overnight and automatically switched itself to external bypass. The external bypass has a separate feed to the internal bypass.
During investigation I found that the current on the internal bypass matched the outgoing current from the UPS to the load (60 - 75A on RYB phases), however there were much larger currents (80 - 95A on each phase) going into the rectifier.
We'll never know why that was since there was no desire to fix as it was a machine from 1999, so we just put it into external bypass and have scheduled a replacement. I have been telling them to replace it for a long time, but whatever.
Anybody have any idea what those rectifier currents were doing? 90A is well within the capacity of the UPS however I'm not sure it's designed to sink all of that as heat through the components.
I confirmed that the current was no longer present after the UPS was isolated, so I don't think they were circulating which was a possibility that I considered.