Zogzog,
DC high potential testing is not considered destructive to new cable installations but, according to IEEE 400, it does not fulfill acceptance test criteria in that even massive defects will not show appreciable leakage current and will be missed by the test.
Very low frequency (VLF) is only an AC voltage source. VLF is not a test or a diagnostic. A VLF high potential withstand is the best 'HIPOT' on the market. However, it is only slightly better than a DC withstand. A HIPOT by definition can never assure reliability. In order to assure reliability you must measure the response of the stress you apply!
Tangent Delta (TD) and all global condition assessment (GCA) types of tests to date are not intended to test new cable systems. There are virtually no measurable losses in a new cable system. Even massive defects in new systems will go undetected with GCA.
The only test, according to IEEE 400, which can prove that the cable system is in excellent condition is to repeat the manufacturer's PD test in the field. (an off-line power frequency PD test with 5pC sensitivity)
As with all engineering decisions there is a risk benefit story that must be considered.
DC HIPOT is the cheapest but is blind to defects in extruded cable.
VLF HIPOT is more costly, it can actually fail some defects that DC can not detect, but you can unknowingly do more harm than good.
Off-line PD is the most costly but, it can actually profile the entire system and compare the results of each component with manufacturer's standards (IEEE, AEIC, ICEA) and predict future performance. Generally if the cost test failures and future outages are added to the price of a VLF or DC HIPOT withstand, there is a significant cost benefit to using an off-line PD test.
Benjamin Lanz
Vice Chair of IEEE 400
Sr. Application Engineer
IMCORP- Power Cable Reliability Consultants