Got a bit of a puzzle in work with a submersible pump stator.
Have tested it using a piece of equipment commonly called a 'Baker' Tester which checks for earth leakage from the windings to the stator body. In this test we ramp the voltage up to around the 2kV mark and hold it at this level for 1 full minute. The machine then gives a reading of upto 20,000MΩ, anything above 1MΩ is acceptable though we wouldn't let a motor go if it was less then 500MΩ. That test was fine as the reading was 20,000MΩ meaning there was no detectable earth leakage.
We then do a 'Surge' test on the windings and the results are shown as a sinusodial wave form for each winding phase. If there are no shorted turns on the coils and if each coil phase is insulated from each other then all three wave forms will lay exactly on top of each other. Voltage for this test is around the 1800/1900 volts.
On doing this test the result showed up as perfect. Then the client arrived to witness the tests being carried out. Ran through them all, perfect results. Then he asked if we could just 'megger' between phases with a standard 1,000volt megger. No problem I said.
I was getting a reading of0.07Ω between 2 of the phases! Checked all the leads were separated and the star point was secure but could not get shut of this 'short'. Put it back on the 'Baker' and got perfect result. Anyway, by the end of the day I had done every test I could think of to reproduce this short with every different peice of equipment I could use.
3 different meggers, 2 Baker test units, (these cost upwards of 20k each by the way), 2 ducter units, 1 motorised 5kV megger, (which showed the short), and even fed 120A through the windings to check if the currents were balanced. They were all spot on the same.
Anyone got any ideas why a 1,000volt megger (3 different ones actually and all recently calibrated and checked by an outside company), should show this fault but more 'sophisticated' equipment says it is alright?
Have tested it using a piece of equipment commonly called a 'Baker' Tester which checks for earth leakage from the windings to the stator body. In this test we ramp the voltage up to around the 2kV mark and hold it at this level for 1 full minute. The machine then gives a reading of upto 20,000MΩ, anything above 1MΩ is acceptable though we wouldn't let a motor go if it was less then 500MΩ. That test was fine as the reading was 20,000MΩ meaning there was no detectable earth leakage.
We then do a 'Surge' test on the windings and the results are shown as a sinusodial wave form for each winding phase. If there are no shorted turns on the coils and if each coil phase is insulated from each other then all three wave forms will lay exactly on top of each other. Voltage for this test is around the 1800/1900 volts.
On doing this test the result showed up as perfect. Then the client arrived to witness the tests being carried out. Ran through them all, perfect results. Then he asked if we could just 'megger' between phases with a standard 1,000volt megger. No problem I said.
I was getting a reading of0.07Ω between 2 of the phases! Checked all the leads were separated and the star point was secure but could not get shut of this 'short'. Put it back on the 'Baker' and got perfect result. Anyway, by the end of the day I had done every test I could think of to reproduce this short with every different peice of equipment I could use.
3 different meggers, 2 Baker test units, (these cost upwards of 20k each by the way), 2 ducter units, 1 motorised 5kV megger, (which showed the short), and even fed 120A through the windings to check if the currents were balanced. They were all spot on the same.
Anyone got any ideas why a 1,000volt megger (3 different ones actually and all recently calibrated and checked by an outside company), should show this fault but more 'sophisticated' equipment says it is alright?