We are currently assessing the condition of a three-phase 2.5 kVA, 400V emergency generator, which is used for black start only.
The conditions of use (used for black start only.) are more concerning to me.
A spot check of insulation resistance may be immaterial.
Anecdote Alert:
True story, I was there.
Hurricane Mitch and the island of Guanaja.
Hurricane Mitch hit the small island of Guanaja three times in three days.
It ripped the tin roof off of our generator plant, about 200 feet from the shore, and dumped salt water on our generators.
I was the part time system engineer.
As soon as the wind stopped I was on a plane out to the Island.
The cables on our 5 diesel generators rose vertically from the generator junction boxes and thence by way of overhead trays to the switch room.
The water ran down the cables and past the old and loose cable glands.
When the cover was removed from one set, there was a white, salty, high water mark at the level of the bottom of the opening into the interior of the generator.
Talking with the major stock holder and president of the Utility;
"What do you suggest that you/we do?"
Me;
"Let me see what I can do with the first set, and based on what I find, we will decide what to do with the other sets."
"That sounds like a good idea. Go ahead."
First step, megger check. Zero Ohms to ground.
Second step. Try a voltmeter on a hunch. Reading a small voltage from the windings to ground.
The copper windings and the iron core, with the salt impregnated windings acting as an electrolyte were acting as a primitive battery.
The repair.
First step, we pulled the rotor.
Second step, using an air driven parts cleaner and rain water instead of solvent, we washed the rotor and the stator for hours.
We reassembled the set and shorted the leads. We excited the set with a battery charger and drove about 200 Amps through a winding rated at about 720 Amps.
With the cooling air intakes and exhausts blocked that was enough to build up a little heat in the windings.
Every couple of hours we would remove the blockages and let the moisture laden air circulate out, and then replace the blockages and let the warmth build up again.
We did that for at lest two days, maybe three days. It was a long time ago.
The result: I found a place where someone at some unknown time had done a megger test on the set and recorded 1.8 Meg-Ohms.
We got the set up to 7 Meg-Ohms.
That was the first set online and that held the load for a number of months.
Another meeting:
"Sir. based on the condition of that set, I recommend that the other sets be sent to a shop in Miami to be professionally cleaned, dipped and baked. As soon as we get a set back we should send this set up to Miami as well.
This set will probably hold the load indefinitely, but if it is ever shut down, do not start it up again before it goes to Miami."
A set came back, refurbished and was put into service. The original set was shut down, but it was not immediately sent up to Miami. (Did I mention that we were in Central America and shipping to Miami was not trivial.)(Why was it not sent? That is a crazy story for another post.)
Some months later, the load was increasing and more capacity was needed. Up until now, when extra capacity was needed, the plant operator would call a seafood plant and they would go onto their own generator, relieving some of the load.
This time, the plant operator was thinking;
"This set was working well. Why can't I use it now?" (What does the Gringo know??)
He started up the original machine and that was the last day in the life of that machine.
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The point. The megger reading today may have little relationship to a megger reading several months from now when a black start is needed.
My recommendation:
Heat the windings. In this instance I would use stator current rather than space heaters.
I would arrange for a low voltage to automatically be connected to circulate in the windings whenever the set is off line.
I would include a current monitor alarm to warn if the heating current is interrupted.
You want the windings and the core to always be several degrees above the dew point.
Remember, the atmospheric dew point may rise rapidly at times. you want your windings and core to have enough delta T above ambient to anticipate a rapid rise in atmospheric dew point.