Thanks for the word of commendation. The fact that DC will not find issues with extruded products which have been grossly compromised during shipment, handling, or installation is exactly the point IEE400 is trying to make. When I by a product I expect it work as specified. The DC test does not give any indication that the product is not working to specification.
For those who are skeptics:
Go ahead, do the experiment yourself. Cut half way through your extruded cable's insulation and apply a standard DC acceptance test. The cable will pass without a problem. A VLF HIPOT may fail and 'find' this defect, and a through non destructive PD test with 5 pC sensitivity definitely will locate the defect without failing the cable.
A Short History of Cable Testing:
I understand your reluctance to accept that IEEE is no longer recommending a DC test as an acceptance test for extruded cable. I was in your same position at one time, until someone explained the problem to me. To understand where the great confusion about cable testing in our industry has come from, we must review the history of cable testing.
Traditionally, cable acceptance tests have been carried out by applying a direct current (DC) voltage to a cable at a specific voltage level and for a prescribed duration. The DC high potential withstand test, or HIPOT, was, and still is, a good choice of high potential withstand test for paper insulated lead covered (PILC) cables. The DC HIPOT is a good choice for PILC cables because PILC cables commonly fail by conduction which can be measured by a test in the form of power loss or ‘leakage’ current. In the 1960s the electric utility industry decided to embrace a new technology and adopt cables with extruded insulation. The extruded cable systems promised to be more economical, simpler to install, and have a relatively long service life (compared to PILC cables). What the electric utilities did not know is that extruded materials, such as cross linked polyethylene (XPLE) and ethylene propylene rubber (EPR), do not typically fail by conduction. They fail in the presence of an alternating current (AC) field through a mechanism associated with PD. This failure mechanism causes the insulation to be eroded over time until a fault channel bridges its entire thickness. Some extruded materials, such as XLPE, cannot tolerate continuous PD for very long. Other extruded materials, such as some formulations of EPR, can last years before failure, even when under continuous PD conditions. In the early days of extruded cable and accessory development, manufacturers understood the problem of PD and quickly switched the quality control test from traditional dielectric loss measurements, such as power factor and tangent delta, to a calibrated 60Hz PD test. A calibrated 60Hz PD test was not available outside the factory shielded test laboratories until the mid 1990s due to high radio frequency (RF) noise in the environment where cables are installed. Today, calibrated 60Hz PD diagnostic tests comparable to the factory tests are readily available for field application.
I am just presenting the facts, the choice is yours. You can find a standard, such as NETA, that will cover you if anyone questions your DC acceptance test but, if you actually want to prove that your cable system is free from gross defects you are going to have to do a VLF HIPOT (per IEEE 400.2), or, better yet, a off-line PD test (per IEEE 400.3)
I truly hope this information is helpful. I welcome your questions and comments on the technical merit of the course of action that I am recommending.
-Cheers
Benjamin Lanz
Sr. Application Engineer
IMCORP