Powervac – GE Industrial Solutions PowerVac 5kV VL PV VL 4.16-250-0 User Manual

Page 30

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PowerVac

®

5kV Vertical Lift

Chapter 10. Maintenance

10-1 General

PowerVac

®

5kV VL circuit breakers have been

designed to be as maintenance-free as practi-

cable. They include features such as sealed

vacuum interrupters and long-life synthetic

greases which contribute to many years of

trouble-free performance with a minimum

amount of maintenance.

If maintenance on the PowerVac

®

VL breaker is

being performed to an extended schedule such

as a 5-year or 10-year program,

the vacuum

interrupter integrity test should be performed if

the breaker is removed for reasons other than

scheduled breaker maintenance, and it has been

more than one year since the last vacuum in-

tegrity test.

Both long and short term maintenance of all elec-

trical equipment is essential for reliability and

safety. Maintenance programs MUST be custom-

ized to the specific application, well planned,

and carried out consistent with both industry

experience and manufacturer’s recommenda-

tions. The local environment must always be

considered in such programs, including such

variables as ambient temperatures, extreme

moisture, number of operations, corrosive at-

mosphere or major insect problems and any

other unusual or abusive condition of the ap-

plication.

One of the critical service activities, sometimes

neglected, involves the servicing and calibra-

tion of various relay, protection, and control de-

vices. These devices monitor conditions in the

primary and secondary circuits, sometimes ini-

tiating emergency corrective action such as

opening or closing circuit breakers. In view of

the vital role of these devices, it is important

that a periodic test program be followed. As was

outlined above, it is recognized that the interval

between periodic checks will vary depending

upon environment, the type of device and the

user’s experience. It is the General Electric

recommendation that, until the user has accu-

mulated enough experience to select a test in-

terval better suited to his individual require-

ments, all significant relay calibrations should

be checked at an interval of one to two years.

To accomplish this, protective relays can be ad-

equately tested using field test sets. Specific

calibration instructions on particular devices

typically are provided by supplied instruction

books.

Instruction books supplied by manufacturers

address components that would normally re-

quire service or maintenance during the useful

life of the equipment. However, they can not in-

clude every possible part that could require at-

tention, particularly over a very long service

period or under adverse environments. Mainte-

nance personnel must be alert to deterioration

of any part of the supplied switchgear, taking

actions, as necessary, to restore it to service-

able status.

Industry publications of recommended mainte-

nance practices such as ANSI/NFPA 70B, Elec-

trical Equipment Maintenance, should be care-

fully studied and applied in each user’s forma-

tion of a planned maintenance program.

Some users may require additional assistance

from GE in the planning and performance of

maintenance. The local GE office can be con-

tacted to either undertake maintenance or to pro-

vide technical assistance, including the latest

equipment publications.

The performance and safety of this equipment

may be compromised by the modification of

supplied parts or their replacement by non-iden-

tical substitutes. All such design changes

should be qualified by GE factory engineering.

The user should methodically keep written main-

tenance records as an aid in future service plan-

ning and equipment reliability improvement. Un-

usual experiences should be promptly com-

municated to GE.

PowerVac

®

Interrupter

The PowerVac

®

Interrupter used in this breaker

is a reliable, clean interrupting element. Since

the contacts are contained in a vacuum cham-

ber, they remain clean and require no mainte-

nance at any time. The metallic vapors eroded

from the contact surfaces during high current

interruption remain in the chamber and are de-

posited on metal shields thus insuring a high

dielectric value of the vacuum and the walls of

the interrupter.

Trouble Reporting

Although all reputable manufacturers design

their products to perform satisfactorily with a

minimum of problems, the IEEE Switchgear

Committee, an organization of both users and

manufacturers, recognized the need for a com-

mon trouble reporting format. A reproducible

copy of this form is included on pages 66 and

67 of this book and is recommended for use

with any manufacturer’s circuit breakers.

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