oldfieldguy
Electrical
- Sep 20, 2006
- 1,573
I've been in electrical power since 1977, 480-500,000 volts. I've designed, commissioned, maintained, etc. Hands-on and as supervisor and manager.
for the past three years I've worked for an interstate natural gas pipeline where 480 volts was "high voltage" and 1000 kVA was a "big transformer".
In progress right now we're installing a bunch of large electric drives, 7000 (VFD's on these) to 22,000 (synchronous) and as a result our stations are getting switchgear in the the 15 kV range.
I have been involved in discussions about what we teach our key technical staff and the station personnel so they can "take care of" this new equipment.
I'm pushing the view that we teach them basic information to keep them safe and tell them that problems are outside their expertise and that a one-week school at a national training facility is NOT going to give them enough expertise to jump in and do preventive maintenance on high voltage equipment.
My favorite and oft-repeated statement is "Treat it like a Japanese radio: "No user-serviceable parts inside.""
I'd appreciate the group's thoughts: What would YOU do if you suddenly dropped a building full of 15 kV gear in the middle of a site where they'd never dealt with anything above 480 volts?
old field guy
for the past three years I've worked for an interstate natural gas pipeline where 480 volts was "high voltage" and 1000 kVA was a "big transformer".
In progress right now we're installing a bunch of large electric drives, 7000 (VFD's on these) to 22,000 (synchronous) and as a result our stations are getting switchgear in the the 15 kV range.
I have been involved in discussions about what we teach our key technical staff and the station personnel so they can "take care of" this new equipment.
I'm pushing the view that we teach them basic information to keep them safe and tell them that problems are outside their expertise and that a one-week school at a national training facility is NOT going to give them enough expertise to jump in and do preventive maintenance on high voltage equipment.
My favorite and oft-repeated statement is "Treat it like a Japanese radio: "No user-serviceable parts inside.""
I'd appreciate the group's thoughts: What would YOU do if you suddenly dropped a building full of 15 kV gear in the middle of a site where they'd never dealt with anything above 480 volts?
old field guy