smckennz
Mechanical
- Feb 25, 2003
- 208
Hi there
I have been asked to look at the possibility of repairing a steam turbine which has has severe damage to one row of blades.
It is a 1960's English Electric turbine driving a generator.
MCR is 3225kW(e). MER is 2085kW(e). Turbine speed is 6000rpm
Inlet steam is 415psig at 390 Deg C, 734 Deg F. Exhaust vacuum is 28.05"Hg. There is some passout, but I havent got details yet.
It is 9 stage with first stage being (Curtis, I think)impulse double blade row.
Something has partly wiped out one blade row; the fourth stage, I think.
My questions are:
Is there a method that I can use to estimate the performance/efficiency reduction caused by loss of this stage?
If the blades are severely damaged, am I better to pull out the whole row together with the diaphragm and diaphragm nozzles or just dress off the damaged blades?
The turbine instrumentation is fairly poor and the steam supply is less than the turbine rating, so an open valve performance test is unlikely to help much.
Thanks
Steve McKenzie
I have been asked to look at the possibility of repairing a steam turbine which has has severe damage to one row of blades.
It is a 1960's English Electric turbine driving a generator.
MCR is 3225kW(e). MER is 2085kW(e). Turbine speed is 6000rpm
Inlet steam is 415psig at 390 Deg C, 734 Deg F. Exhaust vacuum is 28.05"Hg. There is some passout, but I havent got details yet.
It is 9 stage with first stage being (Curtis, I think)impulse double blade row.
Something has partly wiped out one blade row; the fourth stage, I think.
My questions are:
Is there a method that I can use to estimate the performance/efficiency reduction caused by loss of this stage?
If the blades are severely damaged, am I better to pull out the whole row together with the diaphragm and diaphragm nozzles or just dress off the damaged blades?
The turbine instrumentation is fairly poor and the steam supply is less than the turbine rating, so an open valve performance test is unlikely to help much.
Thanks
Steve McKenzie