VLFit
Electrical
- Feb 28, 2005
- 120
thread626-354845
Before retiring this subject, I thought I would revive the above thread to try to get some to answer the questions posed.
PROBLEM: Are the engineering companies that design the 35 kV electrical distribution systems for wind farms going to start designing the systems so that proper high voltage Acceptance/Commissioning testing can be performed after installation? As most are now designed, the cable runs are many miles in length without available break points and many even have direct buried splice and/or cross bonding boxes. This makes it very difficult to perform proper power frequency or VLF AC withstand tests and makes it impossible to perform proper Tan Delta and Partial Discharge tests due to the excessive lengths of cable. Cable fault locating also becomes more difficult. Often the same engineering company that designs a system with 10 mile long cable runs also specifies that the cable be hipoted and/or partial discharge and tan delta tested. You can't have both.
QUESTION: Has this problem area been recognized as a design weakness and are changes being made? Lowest cost design and using the lowest cost bidders to do this work is not the lowest cost solution to installation when the repair to cable and accessory failures for the few years following installation are factored in.
Before retiring this subject, I thought I would revive the above thread to try to get some to answer the questions posed.
PROBLEM: Are the engineering companies that design the 35 kV electrical distribution systems for wind farms going to start designing the systems so that proper high voltage Acceptance/Commissioning testing can be performed after installation? As most are now designed, the cable runs are many miles in length without available break points and many even have direct buried splice and/or cross bonding boxes. This makes it very difficult to perform proper power frequency or VLF AC withstand tests and makes it impossible to perform proper Tan Delta and Partial Discharge tests due to the excessive lengths of cable. Cable fault locating also becomes more difficult. Often the same engineering company that designs a system with 10 mile long cable runs also specifies that the cable be hipoted and/or partial discharge and tan delta tested. You can't have both.
QUESTION: Has this problem area been recognized as a design weakness and are changes being made? Lowest cost design and using the lowest cost bidders to do this work is not the lowest cost solution to installation when the repair to cable and accessory failures for the few years following installation are factored in.