DocumentCode
1531954
Title
Partial discharge. XXV. Calibration of PD measurements for motor and generator windings-why it can´t be done
Author
Stone, G.C.
Author_Institution
Iris Power Eng. Inc., Etobicoke, Ont., Canada
Volume
14
Issue
1
fYear
1998
Firstpage
9
Lastpage
12
Abstract
In most types of high voltage apparatus, a PD acceptance test is required. In contrast, the PD test is very rarely used as an acceptance test for new motor and generator windings. The closest that machine manufacturers come to a PD acceptance test is the power factor tip-up test (IEEE Standard 286), which is an indirect PD test. The tip-up test is sensitive to PD sources when testing individual coils/bars but is relatively insensitive when testing complete windings, due to the presence of stress relief coatings. The lack of a direct PD acceptance test fundamentally results from the inductive nature of a stator winding. This article discusses the reasons for the lack of an absolute PD measurement criteria for stator windings, after a discussion on measurement methods and the quantities used to measure PD activity.
Keywords
ageing; calibration; machine testing; partial discharges; stators; PD activity; PD measurement calibration; generator windings; measurement criteria; measurement methods; motor windings; partial discharge; stator winding; Bars; Calibration; Coils; Manufacturing; Partial discharge measurement; Partial discharges; Reactive power; Stator windings; Testing; Voltage;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Electrical Insulation Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0883-7554
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/57.649908
Filename
649908
Link To Document