Substation Design Chapter 18 and 19
Substation Design Chapter 18 and 19
INSPECTION
GENERAL
It is essential that inspections of
substation equipment, structures, and other
devices be made periodically. In addition to
this periodic inspection, other inspections
may be required to ascertain the cause of
particular problems, when equipment is
placed in service, or when the substation, or
portions thereof, are taken out of service.
PERIODIC INSPECTIONS
Breakers
Fuses
Surge Arresters
Buses and Shield Wire
Capacitors (Series and Shunt)
Reactors (Oil Filled and Air Core)
Disconnects and Other Switches
Control and Metering Equipment
Structures
Grounding System
Cable
Foundations
Substation Area (General)
Substation Fence
Inspection With Diagnostic
Online Test Equipment
Consider supplementing the visual
inspections with the periodic use of
diagnostic test equipment that allows more
detailed inspection of the equipment while
it is still energized.
Infrared Thermography
Infrared thermography can provide a
non-contact means of online evaluation of
hot spots in an energized system. The
infrared viewer provides a television-like
image of the natural infrared energy being
emitted from the objects in its field of view.
Laboratory Oil Analysis
All oil-filled power transformers and circuit
breakers generate gases during normal operation.
But when the equipment begins to function
abnormally, the rate of gas production increases.
Analyzing these gases and their rate of production
is another valuable tool for evaluating the
condition of an operating transformer or breaker.
Ultrasound
Another method for evaluating a system
that is energized is the use of an ultrasound
detector. Ultrasound is used to detect
inaudible noises on equipment that could
indicate potential problems.
Examples of what ultrasound can
be used to detect.
Bus - When corona is present in medium-
and high-voltage circuits, air is ionized.
Corona emits a high-frequency pitch that
can be heard with the human ear.
Power Transformers - Ultrasound can detect