jkristinn
Electrical
- Dec 19, 2011
- 23
The proposal of adding oil pumps to a bank of 1 phase ONAF GSU transformers (100 MVA bank, 220/13,8 kV, conservator type) is under discussion. The reason is not to increase the power capacity of the transformers (as the capacity of the generators connected to the bank will not change), only to lower the hot-spot temperature with the goal of extending the transformer life and decreasing the failure probability. The transformers are new.
The OEM of the transformer has been contacted and the price for the job is not a deal breaker. The OEM has proposed in-line pumps with axial impeller and states that even a failure in the pumps will not interrupt the normal oil flow by convection, so the ONAF rating is not in jeopardy. Our concern is the probability of a pump failure blocking the cooling system flow from the respective cooler (each 1 phase unit has 4 coolers), e.g. in the case of a bearing failure, can anyone comment on the possibility?
Any other concerns we should have?
The OEM of the transformer has been contacted and the price for the job is not a deal breaker. The OEM has proposed in-line pumps with axial impeller and states that even a failure in the pumps will not interrupt the normal oil flow by convection, so the ONAF rating is not in jeopardy. Our concern is the probability of a pump failure blocking the cooling system flow from the respective cooler (each 1 phase unit has 4 coolers), e.g. in the case of a bearing failure, can anyone comment on the possibility?
Any other concerns we should have?