stevenal
Electrical
- Aug 20, 2001
- 3,855
A two mile underground 69kV XLPE transmission line is located in a coastal location. Terminators and arresters are located at both ends. Last month following a dry spell and when the fog rolled in, the line experienced an A to ground fault. Burn marks were noted at the ground end of the A phase terminator at the load end of the line. Cable tested okay, so the terminators were cleaned and the line was reenergized. Conclusion was that the fog wetted the accumulated salt causing a flash-over, although we don't recall a similar event for similar conditions.
Last Friday we tripped on A to G again, also during fog. We noted fresh looking burn marks on the switch adjacent to the load end A phase terminator. Reenergization was unsuccessful, line tripped right out. Using the thumper, we found a bad spot conveniently located adjacent to splice inside a vault about a thousand feet from the load end termination.
The question is: Did the flash-over cause the cable fault, or did the cable fault cause flash-over? The relay provides no fault data other than targets. Thanks.
Last Friday we tripped on A to G again, also during fog. We noted fresh looking burn marks on the switch adjacent to the load end A phase terminator. Reenergization was unsuccessful, line tripped right out. Using the thumper, we found a bad spot conveniently located adjacent to splice inside a vault about a thousand feet from the load end termination.
The question is: Did the flash-over cause the cable fault, or did the cable fault cause flash-over? The relay provides no fault data other than targets. Thanks.