TurbineGen
Electrical
- Mar 1, 2007
- 489
Our facility has recently had problems with failed cable crimps. Failure causes have ranged from workers forgetting to remove the varnish from the CTC (continuously transposed conductor) wire before crimping to improper fill of crimp joint, to incorrect crimp head selection.
The problem is that these crimps are inside oil filled power transformers and have led to failures in the testing, sometimes requiring the element to be untanked. I am trying to find the best way to verify that the crimp connection is good before the element is placed inside the tank. Currently our QA team goes out with a caliper to verify that the crimp haed compressed to the proper size, then attempts to pull the joint apart, which to me is not the way to verify a connection.
I am thinking about using a DLRO (digital low resistance ohmmeter) to test these joints, but have no experience to tell me if this is likely to produce any type of results. Before I ask my company to buy a $5000 piece of equipment that may not tell us anything, I wanted to ask other engineers that might have some experience out there. I am thinking about a 10Amp unit that states that it reads down to 1 micro ohm. Our cables range from #2/0 to 1000MCM.
Thanks in advance
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If it is broken, fix it. If it isn't broken, I'll soon fix that.
The problem is that these crimps are inside oil filled power transformers and have led to failures in the testing, sometimes requiring the element to be untanked. I am trying to find the best way to verify that the crimp connection is good before the element is placed inside the tank. Currently our QA team goes out with a caliper to verify that the crimp haed compressed to the proper size, then attempts to pull the joint apart, which to me is not the way to verify a connection.
I am thinking about using a DLRO (digital low resistance ohmmeter) to test these joints, but have no experience to tell me if this is likely to produce any type of results. Before I ask my company to buy a $5000 piece of equipment that may not tell us anything, I wanted to ask other engineers that might have some experience out there. I am thinking about a 10Amp unit that states that it reads down to 1 micro ohm. Our cables range from #2/0 to 1000MCM.
Thanks in advance
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If it is broken, fix it. If it isn't broken, I'll soon fix that.