Hello and greetings to all again.
I haven’t posted to this site in a while but, with all the confusion I hear in the above discussion, it appears that we need to open up this topic again. We have had this discussion several times on this forum but perhaps many of you don’t remember our previous discussions. I recommend that you do a search on this site for ‘cable testing’ if you would like to review our past discussions.
I will assume the subject cable systems are built with extruded insulation. Are they?
Yes, a 40 year old cable is ‘old’ but, if the financial impact of an outage is low and the cable system’s reliability assured with a thorough diagnostic test, there are very few good reasons to replace it.
1) Moderate loading is not likely to be an issue
The constant loading has very little to do with the insulation reliability of the shielded power cables. If we are talking about the reliability of mechanical connection you might have a point. Extruded cable systems rated 5kV and higher almost never fail by conduction or thermal issues. Extruded cable systems almost always fail through an erosion process associated with partial discharge (PD).
2) PD and TD are not effective with unshielded cables –in fact most electrical tests are not effective on unshielded cable!
hanksmith says that some of the cables are unshielded. Unless a cable has a shield to define a ground plane, you are only testing the points of the cable that do. Otherwise you are testing the air around the insulation, which is not important!
3)On-line PD finds <3% of defects
Why are some of you recommending an on-line PD test for the shielded cables when the circuit can be de-energized? If reliability is critical, the only test that can assure reliability is to repeat the manufacturer’s off-line PD test.
4) TD cannot assure reliability
TD detects aging mechanisms in cable insulation. The problem is that you can not tell where the “losses” are in the cable system. Most TD tests in field are not performed with guard circuits at the terminations. If you do not use guard circuits, your measurement is useless. Most field TD equipment sold in North America do not have guard circuit capabilities! Losses measured over the surface of an old termination or at joints can be 2 to 3 times higher than losses in cable insulation. Even if a TD test is not grossly affected by a termination or joint, what are you going to do with a measurement that tells you that your old cable is, well…. old! This sounds like an expensive calendar to me. If you are trying to compare the relative losses on 1000s of utility cable to prove to management that your old cables are old the TD approach may make some sense. If you are working with critical cable systems, and TD test is a very poor choice to assure reliability.
I know one company that replaced 30+ out of 40+ terminations because of “bad” TD readings. I asked how they knew which terminations to replace. They didn’t know, so they just replaced the terminations at both ends of each phase with a ‘bad’ TD reading! I asked they used a guard circuit. They asked me, “What’s that”. My friends, unless you use guard circuits, your Power Factor, TD, Dielectric Spectroscopy, Relaxation Voltage,….. (all general condition assessment tests) results will have serious errors. Sadly, the company who did the TD testing, is also in the cable repair business. The more ‘bad’ TD readings they measured, the more repair business they received! My advice… Before you decide what test to use and what to do with the results, consult an expert and the IEEE standards.
5) For the record, PD tests do not measure leakage. Leakage has very little to do with extruded cable system reliably.
6) A “Tip up” test refers to the shape of the voltage vs. loss curve. To the best of my knowledge there is no such thing as a “tied up” curve. If there are losses in system under test, the voltage/loss curve will tip up in a non linear fashion as the voltage increases.
7) Careful with VLF destructive withstand – you may do more damage than good
If you can afford an outage, and you simply want to blow out some weak points on a shielded power cable a very low frequency (VLF) AC destructive withstand is a reasonable choice. Remember a destructive HIPOT cannot assure reliability.
8) I agree with Zogzog that you need to read the standards. However, the guys associated with the link provided need to read the cable testing standards too. While they provide many great electrical services for other electrical components, to the best of my knowledge they only provide, on-line PD testing for cable systems. If the manufacturers only did on-line PD testing on all cable components sold over the last 40 years, all of our cable systems would be in big trouble!
Cheers,
-Ben
Benjamin Lanz
Past Chair of IEEE 400
Sr. Application Engineer
IMCORP- Power Cable Reliability Consultants