Thank You electric Pete, that was interesting.
Sorry for the delay in replying here are some more details:
The aluminium was through every thing and we're opting for a total rewind. (Any comments there?)
They were circular windings as described in Pete's post (not shell), oil filled, 3phase, the load is a cycloconverter driving a 9200kW motor.
The windings seemed to have failed at the joint between the two sheets. The sheet is the full weight of the winding but split in three parts because of the availability of the sheet. The sheets are joined at the beginning and the end by the low voltage leads, but through out the winding the sheets are simply butted against one another. There was 10 mils of kraft paper insulation between layers and it seems to have been cut by the edge of one strip at the point where two of the strips meet.
A transformer designer from another plant has suggested that the problem is the fact that we have three sheets, and two would have been much better. When thinking about it, the center sheet of the three wouldn't have room for thermal expansion.
At a few points in the winding one sheet was riding up on the sheet beside it, which seems to be where the paer was cut.
The load on the transformer in very cyclical, the load is about 200% of nameplate, with a cycle of about on 45 seconds off 2 minutes. The transformer didn't seem to have a thermal problem (top oil max needle 30C), and when we disassembled one of the unfailed coils there was no insulation damage except for the creasing of the paper as described.
Because of the nature of the load we suspect there is some movement in the coil which may have caused the cutting action of the sheet.
Has anybody specified large current transformers with cyclical loads like this before? What winding configurations were used?
We're having the tranformer rebuilt with copper winding, an extra 10 mils of nomex between layers (along with existing kraft paper), and adding a small gap between sheets so they don't ride on each other. Any comments here?
Anybody read any articles on transformers for large drives which you can provide a reference for?
Any general comments on the above would be appreciated.
Thank You,
Gord