Latango
Electrical
- Dec 12, 2006
- 30
We have an oldish (mid 90's) ABB Power factor correction system that was found in a warehouse and dropped off to us as a freebie. It has 9 50kVAR capacitors + reactors rated at 415V, and an ABB relay to allow for automatic operation or each bank can be switched in manually. The control circuit works exactly as the schematic says it should, all the contactors work and don't look like they have ever actually switched any current (low ducter readings on the contacts), and visual inspection of all connections show that the discharge resistors are intact and in good condition.
My problem is that I haven't actually used much in the way of delta connected capacitors before. According to the IEC standards they require a dielectric test, a visual inspection, electrical operation test and insulation test.
-Dielectric test for 415V is 2500V, so I am assuming that is the 3 phases linked to earth. (We do a lot of MV transformer and switchgear testing, so we have the gear)
-Insulation test is the same I take it? Say 1kV megger to earth.
But...
How do I test if they are functioning AS a capacitor bank? We don't have a large supply here, so I can't just power up a 200kW motor or something (we have plenty of transformers we could energise in the 100-1000kVA range) and I'm a little wary of charging up a big capacitor without being 100% confident in the methods.
Any ideas on how to check their capacitance, and whether I need to remove the shorting resistors to do it?
My problem is that I haven't actually used much in the way of delta connected capacitors before. According to the IEC standards they require a dielectric test, a visual inspection, electrical operation test and insulation test.
-Dielectric test for 415V is 2500V, so I am assuming that is the 3 phases linked to earth. (We do a lot of MV transformer and switchgear testing, so we have the gear)
-Insulation test is the same I take it? Say 1kV megger to earth.
But...
How do I test if they are functioning AS a capacitor bank? We don't have a large supply here, so I can't just power up a 200kW motor or something (we have plenty of transformers we could energise in the 100-1000kVA range) and I'm a little wary of charging up a big capacitor without being 100% confident in the methods.
Any ideas on how to check their capacitance, and whether I need to remove the shorting resistors to do it?