FIST 3-30 Transformer Maintenance: Facilities Instructions, Standards, and Techniques
FIST 3-30 Transformer Maintenance: Facilities Instructions, Standards, and Techniques
FIST 3-30 Transformer Maintenance: Facilities Instructions, Standards, and Techniques
TRANSFORMER
MAINTENANCE
FACILITIES INSTRUCTIONS,
STANDARDS, AND TECHNIQUES
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Acronyms and Abbreviations
A air
ANA self-cooled, nonventilated kW kilowatt
ANSI American National Standards IEEE Institute of Electrical and
Institute Electronic Engineers
CEGB Central Electric Generating M/DW moisture by dry weight
Board mg milligram
cfm cubic feet per minute mva mega-volt-amps
CH4 methane ND not detected
C2 H2 acetylene N2 nitrogen
C2 H4 ethylene O oil
C2 H6 ethane O2 oxygen
CO carbon monoxide OD outer diameter
CO2 carbon dioxide ppb parts per billion
CT current transformer ppm parts per million
DBPC Ditertiary Butyl Paracresol psi pounds per square inch
DGA dissolved gas analysis Reclamation Bureau of Reclamation
EHV extra high voltage SCADA Supervisory Control and Data
FA forced air (fans) Acquisition
FO forced oil (pumps) STP standard temperature and
G some type of gas pressure
GA gas, self-cooled TDCG total dissolved combustible gas
gm grams TOA Transformer Oil Analyst
GSU generator step up TTR transformer turns ratio test
H2 hydrogen TSC Technical Service Center
ID inner diameter UV ultraviolet
IFT interfacial tension V volts
IEC International Electrotechnical W water/oil heat exchanger
Commission
IR infrared
JHA job hazard analysis
KOH potassium hydroxide
kV kilovolt
kVA kilovoltampere
Contents
Page
v
Contents (cont.)
Page
References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
Tables
Table No. Page
Figures
Figure No. Page
vi
Contents (cont.)
Figures (cont.)
Figure No. Page
vii
1. PURPOSE
Transformers rated 500 kilovoltamperes (kVA) and above are considered power
transformers. Reclamation has hundreds of power transformers with voltages as low as
480 volts (V) and as high as 550 kilovolts (kV).
All generator step-up (GSU) transformers, and many station service, and excitation
transformers are considered power transformers because they are rated 500 kVA or larger.
Current minimum replacement time is around 14 months; a more realistic time may be
18 months to 2 years. In the future, lead times may extend well beyond what they are
today. Therefore, high quality maintenance and accurate diagnostics are important for all
transformers, but absolutely essential for older ones—especially for critical transformers
that would cause loss of generation. It is also very important to consider providing spares
for critical transformers.
Heat is one of the most common destroyers of transformers. Operation at only 10 °C above
the transformer rating will cut transformer life by 50%. Heat is caused by internal losses
due to loading, high ambient temperature, and solar radiation. It is important to under-
stand how your particular transformers are cooled and how to detect problems in the
cooling systems. ANSI and IEEE require the cooling class of each transformer to appear on
its nameplate. Cooling classifications, with short explanations, appear in sections 3.1 and
3.2. The letters of the class designate inside atmosphere and type or types of cooling. In
some transformers, more than one class of cooling and load rating are indicated. At each
1
DRY TYPE TRANSFORMER MAINTENANCE SUMMARY
When new after Do an infrared scan and compare with temperature gage, if any.
energizing and
allowing If transformer is gas filled (nitrogen [N2]), check pressure gage against data
temperature and sheets; never allow gas pressure to fall below 1 pound per square inch
loading to stabilize (psi).
After 1 week of Perform infrared scan and compare with temperature gage, if any.
operation at normal
loading Check temperature gage, if any, and compare with nameplate rating.
Check loading and compare with nameplate rating.
(Note: The time De-energize and remove panels for internal inspection.
between these
periodic inspections Use vacuum to remove as much dirt as possible.
may be increased if
the first internal After vacuuming, use low pressure dry air (20 to 25 psi) to blow off
inspection of remaining dirt. Caution: Make sure air is dry.
windings and
connections are Check for discolored copper and discolored insulation.
found clean and in
good condition and Check for corroded and loose connections.
if loading is at or
below nameplate Check for carbon tracking on insulation and insulators.
rating.)
Check for cracked, chipped, and loose insulators.
If windings are found dirty, add filter material to air intake ports.
2
step of additional cooling, the rating increases to correspond with increased cooling. Note
that the letter “A” indicates air, “FA” indicates forced air (fans), “O” indicates oil, “FO”
indicates forced oil (pumps), “G” indicates some type of gas, and “W” indicates there is a
water/oil heat exchanger.
1. Class AA are ventilated, self-cooled transformers. This means that there are
ventilation ports located in outside walls of the transformer enclosure. There are no
fans to force air into and out of the enclosure with typically no external fins or
radiators. Cooler air enters the lower ports, is heated as it rises past windings, and
exits the upper ventilation ports. (It will not be repeated below; but it is obvious that
in every cooling class, some heat is also removed by natural circulation of air around
the outside of the enclosure.)
2. Class AFA transformers are self-cooled (A) and additionally cooled by forced
circulation of air (FA). This means that there are ventilation ports for fan inlets and
outlets only. (Inlets are usually filtered.) Normally, there are no additional
ventilation ports for natural air circulation.
3. Class AA/FA transformers are ventilated, self-cooled (same as Class AA in item 1).
In addition, they have a fan or fans providing additional forced-air cooling. Fans may
be wired to start automatically when the temperature reaches a pre-set value. These
transformers generally have a dual load rating, one for AA (self-cooling natural air
flow) and a larger load rating for FA (forced air flow).
4. Class ANV transformers are self-cooled (A), non-ventilated (NV) units. The
enclosure has no ventilation ports or fans and is not sealed to exclude migration of
outside air, but there are no provisions to intentionally allow outside air to enter and
exit. Cooling is by natural circulation of air around the enclosure. This transformer
may have some type of fins attached outside the enclosure to increase surface area for
additional cooling.
5. Class GA transformers are sealed with a gas inside (G) and are self-cooled (A). The
enclosure is hermetically sealed to prevent leakage. These transformers typically have
a gas, such as nitrogen or freon, to provide high dielectric and good heat removal.
Cooling occurs by natural circulation of air around the outside of the enclosure. There
are no fans to circulate cooling air; however, there may be fins attached to the outside
to aid in cooling.
3.1.1 Potential Problems and Remedial Actions for Dry Type Transformer
Cooling Systems [14]. It is important to keep transformer enclosures
reasonably clean. It is also important to keep the area around them clear. Any
items near or against the transformer impede heat transfer to cooling air around
3
the enclosure. As dirt accumulates on cooling surfaces, it becomes more and more
difficult for air around the transformer to remove heat. As a result, over time, the
transformer temperature slowly rises unnoticed, reducing service life.
Transformer rooms and vaults should be ventilated. Portable fans (never water)
may be used for additional cooling if necessary. A fan rated at about 100 cubic
feet per minute (cfm) per kilowatt (kW) of transformer loss [5], located near the
top of the room to remove hot air, will suffice. These rooms/vaults should not be
used as storage.
When the transformer is new, check the fans and all controls for proper
operation. After it has been energized and the loading and temperature are
stable, check the temperature with an infrared (IR) camera and compare loading
with the nameplate. Repeat the temperature checks after 1 week of operation.
Once each year under normal load, check transformer temperatures with an
IR camera [4,7]. If the temperature rise (above ambient) is near or above
nameplate rating, check for overloading. Check the temperature alarm for proper
operation. Check enclosures and vaults/rooms for dirt accumulation on
transformer surfaces and debris near or against enclosures. Remove all items
near enough to affect air circulation. To avoid dust clouds, a vacuum should first
be used to remove excess dirt. Low pressure (20 to 25 pounds per square inch
[psi]) dry compressed air may be used for cleaning after most dirt has been
removed by vacuum. The transformer must be de-energized before this procedure
unless it is totally enclosed and there are no exposed energized conductors.
Portable generators may be used for lighting.
After de-energizing the transformer, remove access panels and inspect windings
for dirt- and heat-discolored insulation and structure problems [14]. It is
important that dirt not be allowed to accumulate on windings because it impedes
heat removal and reduces winding life. A vacuum should be used for the initial
winding cleaning, followed by compressed air [7]. Care must be taken to ensure
the compressed air is dry to avoid blowing moisture into windings. Air pressure
should not be greater than 20 to 25 psi to avoid imbedding small particles into
insulation. After cleaning, look for discolored copper and insulation, which
indicates overheating. If discoloration is found, check for loose connections. If
there are no loose connections, check the cooling paths very carefully and check for
overloading after the transformer has been re-energized. Look for carbon tracking
and cracked, chipped, or loose insulators. Look for and repair loose clamps, coil
spacers, deteriorated barriers, and corroded or loose connections.
Check fans for proper operation including controls, temperature switches, and
alarms. Clean fan blades and filters if needed. A dirty fan blade or filter reduces
cooling air flow over the windings and reduces service life. If ventilation ports do
not have filters, they may be fabricated from home-furnace filter material. Adding
filters is only necessary if the windings are dirty upon yearly inspections.
4
OIL-FILLED TRANSFORMER MAINTENANCE SUMMARY
Before energizing,
inspect and test all
controls, wiring, fans
alarms, and gages.
Indepth inspection of Oil pumps load current, oil Oil pumps load current, oil flow Check diaphragm or
transformer and flow indicators, fans, etc. indicators, fans etc, see 3.2.5, bladder for leaks if you
cooling system, See 3.2.5, 3.2.6, and 4.1. 3.2.6 and 4.1 have conservator. See
check for leaks and Thermometers 4.1.2 and 3. Thermometers 4.1.2 and 3, 4.2.2.
proper operation. Heat exchangers. heat exchangers
Transformer tank 4.1.1. Transformer tank 4.1.1
Do a DGA. Oil level gages 4.1.4. Oil level gages 4.1.4
Pressure relief 4.1.5. Pressure relief 4.1.5
Do a DGA. Do a DGA
Test all controls, See 3.2.5, 4.1.4, 4.1.5. See 3.2.5 Thermometers. See 4.1.3.
relays, gages; test Inspect pressure relief for leaks Oil level gages 4.1.4.
alarms and and indication for operation Inspect pressure relief
annunciator points. (rod extension) see 4.1.5 4.1.5.
Sudden pressure relay
4.1.6.
Buchholz relay 4.1.7.
Test alarms, fan and
pump controls, etc. See
3.2.6.
Inspect transformer Check with binoculars for check with binoculars for
bushings. cracks and chips; look for cracks and chips, look carefully
oil leaks and check oil for oil leaks and check oil
levels. levels IR Scan See 4.1.8
IR scan. See 4.1.8.
Doble test Doble test transformer and See 4.1.8 and 4.7.
transformer and bushings before
bushings. energizing. See 4.1.8, 4.7.
5
Check pressure gages by looking at the weekly data sheets; if pressure never varies
with temperature changes, the gage is defective. Never allow the pressure to go below
about 1 psi during cold weather. Add nitrogen to bring the pressure up to 2½ to 3 psi
to insure that moist air will not be pulled in.
6
3.2.2 Liquid-Immersed, Air-Cooled/Forced Liquid-Cooled. There are two
classes in this group.
1. Class OW: Transformer coil and core are immersed in oil. Typically a oil/water
heat exchanger (radiator) is attached to the outside of the tank. Cooling water is
pumped through the heat exchanger, but the oil flows only by natural circulation.
As oil is heated by the windings, it rises to the top and exits through piping to the
radiator. As it is cooled, the oil descends through the radiator and re-enters the
transformer tank at the bottom.
2. Class OW/A: Transformer coil and core are immersed in oil. This transformer
has two ratings. Cooling for one rating (OW) is obtained as in 1 above. The self-
cooled rating (A) is obtained by natural circulation of air over the tank and cooling
surfaces.
7
3.2.5 Potential Problems and Remedial Actions for Liquid Filled
Transformer Cooling Systems.
Leaks. Tanks and radiators may develop oil leaks, especially at connections. To
repair a leak in a radiator core, you must remove the radiator. Small leaks may
also develop in headers or individual pipes. These small leaks possibly may be
stopped by peening with a ball peen hammer. Some manufacturer’s field
personnel try to stop leaks by using a two-part epoxy while the transformer is
under vacuum. Do not try this unless the transformer has been drained, because
a vacuum may cause bubbles to form in the oil that can lodge in the winding and
cause arcing. When all else fails, the leak may be welded with oil still in the
radiator, if proper precautions are carefully observed [3, 4]. Welding with oil
inside will cause gases to form in the oil. Take an oil sample for a dissolved gas
analysis (DGA) before welding and 24 hours after re-energizing to identify gas
increases due to welding. If the leak is bad enough, the tank may have to be
drained so the leak can be repaired. Treat leaks carefully; do not ignore them. Oil
leaks are serious maintenance and environmental issues and should be corrected.
Radiators may need to be cleaned in areas where deposits appear on pipes and
headers. Dirt and deposits hamper heat transfer to the cooling air. Finned
radiators must be cleaned with compressed air when they become dirty.
8
Valve Problems. If your transformer has isolating valves for radiators, check to
make sure they are fully open on both top and bottom of the radiators. A broken
valve stem may cause the valve to be fully or partially closed, but it will appear
that the valve is open.
Mineral Deposits. Don’t even think about spraying water on the radiators or
tank to increase cooling except in the most dire emergency. Minerals in the water
will deposit on radiators as water evaporates and are almost impossible to
remove. These minerals will reduce the efficiency of cooling still further.
Additional fans blowing on radiators and/or transformer tank is a better
alternative [4].
After 1 month of service and yearly, inspect and test the oil pumps.
Inspect piping and connections for leaks. Override the temperature controller so
that the pump starts. Check the oil pump motor current on all three phases with
an accurate ammeter; this will give an indication if oil flow is correct and if
unusual wear is causing additional motor loading. Record this information for
later comparison, especially if there is no oil flow indicator. If the motor load
current is low, something is causing low oil flow. Carefully inspect all
valves to make sure they are fully open. A valve stem may break and leave the
valve partially or fully closed, even though the valve handle indicates the valve is
fully open. Pump impellers have been found loose on the shaft, reducing oil flow.
Sludge buildup or debris in lines can also cause low oil flow. If motor load
current is high, this may indicate impeded pump rotation. Listen for
unusual noises. Thrust bearing wear results in the impeller advancing on the
housing. An impeller touching the housing makes a rubbing sound which is
different from the sound of a failing motor bearing. If this is heard, remove the
pump motor from the housing and check impeller clearance. Replace the thrust
bearing if needed, and replace the motor bearings if the shaft has too much play or
if noise is unusual.
9
Three phase pumps will run and pump some oil even when they are running
backwards. Vane type oil-flow meters will indicate flow on this low amount. The
best indication of this is that sometimes the pump will be very noisy. The motor
load current may also be lower than for full load. If this is suspected due to the
extra noise and higher transformer temperature, the pump should be checked for
proper rotation. Reverse two phase leads if this is encountered.[4]
After 1 month of service and yearly, check the oil flow indicator. It has a
small paddle which extends into the oil stream and may be either on the suction
or discharge side of the pump. A low flow of only about 5 feet per second velocity
causes the flag to rotate. Flow can be too low, and the indicator will still show
flow. If there is no flow, a spring returns the flag to the off position and a switch
provides an alarm. With control power on the switch, open the pump circuit at the
motor starter and make sure the correct alarm point activates when the pump
stops. Check that the pointer is in the right position when the pump is off and
when it is running. Pointers can stick and fail to provide an alarm when needed.
Oil flow may also be checked with an ultrasonic flow meter. Ultrasonic listening
devices can detect worn bearings, rubbing impellers, and other unusual noises
from oil pumps.
Pumps can pull air in through gaskets on the suction side of the pumps.
The suction (vacuum) on the intake side of the pump can pull air through gaskets
that are not tight. Pump suction has also been known to pull air through packing
around valve stems, in the suction side piping. This can result in dangerous
bubbles in the transformer oil and may cause the gas detector or Buchholz relay to
operate. Dissolved gas analysis will show a big increase in oxygen and nitrogen
content [4]. High oxygen and nitrogen content can also be caused by gasket leaks
elsewhere.
10
4.1 Oil-Filled Transformers
After 1 month of service and once each year, make an indepth inspection of
oil-filled transformers. Before beginning, look carefully at temperature and oil level
data sheets. If temperature, pressure, or oil level gages never change, even with
seasonal temperature and loading changes, something is wrong. The gage may be
stuck or data sheets may have been filled in incorrectly. Examine the DGA’s for
evidence of leaks, etc.
4.1.1 Transformer Tank. Check for excessive corrosion and oil leaks. Pay
special attention to flanges and gaskets (bushings, valves, and radiators) and
lower section of the main tank. Report oil leaks to maintenance, and pay special
attention to the oil level indicator if leaks are found. Severely corroded spots
should be wire brushed and painted with a rust inhibitor.
Winding temperature thermometers work the same as the top oil thermometer
(4.1.2) above, except that the bulb is in a separate thermometer well near the top
of the tank. A wire-type heater coil is either inserted into or wrapped around the
thermometer well which surrounds the temperature sensitive bulb. In some
transformers, a current transformer (CT) is around one of the three winding leads
and provides current directly to the heater coil in proportion to winding current.
In other transformers, the CT supplies current to an auto-transformer that
supplies current to the heater coil. The heater warms the bulb and the dial
indicates a temperature, but it is not the true hottest-spot temperature.
11
These devices are calibrated at the factory by changing taps either on the CT or on
the autotransformer, or by adjusting the calibration resistors in the control
cabinet. They normally cannot be field calibrated or tested, other than testing the
thermometer, as mentioned. The calibration resistors can be adjusted in the field
if the manufacturer provides calibration curves for the transformer. In practice,
most winding temperature indicators are out of calibration, and their readings are
meaningless. These temperature indications should not be relied upon for loading
operations or maintenance decisions.
Fiber optic temperature sensors can be imbedded directly into the winding as the
transformer is being built and are much more accurate. This system is available
as an option on new transformers at an increased cost, which may be worth it
since the true winding “hottest-spot” temperature is critical when higher loading
is required.
Thermometers can be removed without lowering the transformer oil if they are in
a thermometer well. Check your transformer instruction manual. Look carefully
at the capillary tubing between the thermometer well and dial indicator. If the
tubing has been pinched or accidently struck, it may be restricted. This is not an
obvious defect, and it can cause the dial pointer to lock in one position. If this
defect is found, the whole gage must be returned to the factory for repair or
replacement; it cannot be repaired in the field. Look for a leak in the tubing
system; the gage will be reading very low and must be replaced if a leak is
discovered. Thermometers should be removed and tested every 3 to 5 years as
described below.
The alarms and other functions should also be tested to see if the correct
annunciator points activate, pumps/fans operate, etc.
If it is not possible to replace the temperature gage or send it to the factory for
repair, place a temperature correction factor on your data form to add to the dial
reading so the correct temperature will be recorded. Also lower the alarm and
12
pump-turn-on settings by this same correction factor. Since these are pressure-
filled systems, the indicator will typically read low if it is out of calibration. Field
testing has shown some of these gages reading 15 °C to 20 °C lower than actual
temperature. This is hazardous for transformers because it will allow them to
continuously run hotter than intended, due to delayed alarms and cooling
activation. If thermometers are not tested and errors corrected, transformer
service life may be shortened or premature failure may occur.
4.1.4 Oil Level Indicators. After 1 month of service, inspect and every
3 to 5 years, check the tank oil level indicators. These are float operated,
with the float mechanism magnetically coupled through the tank wall to the dial
indicator. As level increases, the float rotates a magnet inside the tank. Outside
the tank, another
magnet follows (rotates),
which moves the
pointer. The center of
the dial is normally
marked with a
temperature 25 °C
(77 °F). High and low
level points are also
marked to follow level
changes as the oil
expands and contracts
with temperature
changes. The proper Figure 2.—Oil Level Indicator.
way to determine
accurate oil level is to first look at the top oil temperature indicator. After
determining the temperature, look at the level gage. The pointer should be at a
reasonable level corresponding to the top oil temperature. If the transformer is
fully loaded, the top oil temperature will be high, and the level indicator should be
near the high mark. If the transformer is de-energized and the top oil
temperature is near 25 °C, the oil level pointer should be at or near 25 °C.
To check the level indicator, you can remove the outside mechanism for testing
without lowering transformer oil. After removing the gage, hold a magnet on the
back of the dial and rotate the magnet; the dial indicator should also rotate. If it
fails to respond or if it drags or sticks, replace it. As mentioned above, defective
units can be sent to the factory for repair.
There may also be electrical switches for alarms and possibly tripping off the
transformer on falling tank level. These should be checked with an ohmmeter for
proper operation. The alarm/tripping circuits should also be tested to see if the
correct annunciator points and relays respond. See the transformer instruction
book for information on your specific indicator.
13
If oil has had to be lowered in the transformer or conservator for other reasons
(e.g., inspections), check the oil level float mechanism. Rotate the float
mechanism by hand to check for free movement. Check the float visually to make
sure it is secure to the arm and that the arm is in the proper shape. Some arms
are formed (not straight).
4.1.5 Pressure Relief Devices. These devices are the transformers’ last line of
defense against excessive internal pressure. In case of a fault or short circuit, the
resultant arc instantly vaporizes surrounding oil, causing a rapid buildup of
gaseous pressure. If the pressure relief device does not operate properly
and pressure is not sufficiently relieved within a few milliseconds, a
catastrophic tank rupture can result, spreading flaming oil over a wide
area. Two types of these devices are discussed below. The instruction manual for
your transformer must be consulted for specifics.
Caution: Never paint pressure-relief devices because paint can cause the plunger
or rotating shaft to stick. Then the device might not relieve pressure, which could
lead to catastrophic tank failure during a fault. Look at the top of the device; on
newer units, a yellow or blue button should be visible. If these have been painted,
the button will be the same color as the tank. On older units, a red flag should be
visible; if it has been painted, it will be the same color as the tank.
If they have been painted, they should be replaced. It is virtually impossible to
remove all paint from the mechanism and be certain the device will work when
needed.
14
Caution: Bolts that hold the device to the tank may be loosened safely, but never
loosen screws which hold the cover to the flange without referring to the
instruction manual and using great care. Springs that oppose tank pressure are
held in compression by these screws, and their stored energy could be hazardous.
Once each year, and as soon as possible after a known through-fault or internal
fault, inspect pressure devices to see if they have operated. This must be done
from a high-lift bucket if the transformer is energized. Look at each pressure
relief device to see if the yellow (or blue) button is visible. If the device has
operated, about 2 inches of the colored rod will be visible. Each year, test the
alarm circuits by operating the switch by hand and making sure the correct
annunciator point is activated. If the relief device operates during operation, do
not re-energize the transformer; Doble and other testing may be required before
re-energizing, and an oil sample should be sent for analysis
A test stand with a pressure gage may be fabricated to test the pressure relief
function. Current cost of a pressure relief device is about $600, so testing instead
of replacement may be prudent. Have a spare on hand so that the tank will not
have to be left open. If the tank top or pressure relief device has gasket limiting
grooves, always use a nitrile replacement gasket; if there are no grooves, use a
cork-nitrile gasket. Relief devices themselves do not leak often; the gasket usually
leaks.
Older Pressure Relief Devices. Older pressure relief devices have a diaphragm
and a relief pin that is destroyed each time the device operates and must be
replaced.
Caution: These parts must be replaced with exact replacement parts, or the
operating relief-pressure of the device will be wrong.
The relief pin determines operating pressure; a number, which is the operating
pressure, normally appears on top of the pin. Check your specific transformer
instruction manual for proper catalog numbers. Do not assume you have the right
parts, or that correct parts have been previously installed—look it up. If the
operating pressure is too high, a catastrophic tank failure could result.
On older units, a shaft rotates, operates alarm/trip switches, and raises a small
red flag when the unit releases pressure. If units have been painted or are more
than 30 years old, they should be replaced with the new model as soon as it is
possible to have a transformer outage.
15
Once each year and as soon as possible after a through-fault or internal fault,
examine the indicator flag to see if the device has operated. They must be
examined from a high-lift bucket if the transformer is energized. A clearance
must be obtained to test, repair, or reset the device. See the instruction manual
for your specific transformer. Test alarm/trip circuits by operating the switch
byhand. Check to make sure the correct annunciator point activates.
Every 3 to 5 years, when doing other maintenance or testing, examine the top of
the transformer tank around the pressure relief device. If the transformer has a
conservator and oil is visible, the device is leaking, either around the tank gasket
or relief diaphragm. The gasket and/or device must be replaced. Take care that
the new device will fit the same tank opening prior to ordering. Most of them are
made by the Qualitrol Company; contact the manufacturer to obtain a correct
replacement.
Modern sudden pressure relays consist of three bellows (see figure 4) with silicone
sealed inside. Changes in pressure in the transformer deflect the main sensing
bellows. Silicone inside acts on two control bellows arranged like a balance beam,
one on each side. One bellows senses pressure changes through a small orifice.
The opening is automatically changed by a bimetallic strip to adjust for normal
temperature
changes of the oil. BIMETAL TEMPERATURE COMPENSATOR CONTROL ORIFICE
CONTROL BELLOWS
The orifice delays BLEED VALVE
PRESSURE BALANCE BEAM
pressure changes in SILICONE FLUID ACTUATOR
this bellows. The ELECTRICAL SWITCH
SENSING BELLOWS
other bellows
responds to TO
immediate pressure TRANSFORMER
changes and is
affected much more
TRANSFORMER OIL
quickly. Pressure
difference tilts the
balance beam and 1/8" DIAMETER DRAIN HOLE
ELECTRICAL CONNECTOR
activates the switch. SILICONE SENSING FLUID MANIFOLD HOUSING CONTROL BELLOWS
This type relay
automatically resets Figure 4.—Sudden Pressure Relay.
16
when the two bellows again reach pressure equilibrium. If this relay operates, do
not re-energize the transformer until you have determined the exact cause and
corrected the problem.
Old style sudden pressure relays have only one bellows. A sudden excessive
pressure within the transformer tank exerts pressure directly on the bellows,
which moves a spring-loaded operating pin. The pin operates a switch which
provides alarm and breaker trip. After the relay has operated, the cap must be
removed and the switch reset to normal by depressing the reset button.
Once every 3 to 5 years, the sudden pressure relay should be tested according to
manufacturer’s instructions. Generally, only a squeeze-bulb and pressure gage
(5 psi) are required. Disconnect the tripping circuit and use an ohmmeter to test
for relay operation. Test the alarm circuit and verify that the correct alarm point
is activated. Use an ohmmeter to verify the trip signal is activated or, if possible,
apply only control voltage to the breaker and make sure the tripping function
operates. Consult the manufacturer’s manual for your specific transformer for
detailed instructions.
17
float. These contacts are typically connected to cause the transformer to trip.
This relay also serves a third function, similar to the sudden pressure relay. A
magnetically held paddle attached to the bottom float is positioned in the oil-flow
stream between the conservator and transformer tank. Normal flows resulting
from temperature changes are small and bypass below the paddle. If a fault
occurs in the transformer, a pressure wave (surge) is created in the oil. This surge
travels through the pipe and displaces the paddle. The paddle activates the same
magnetic switch as the bottom float mentioned above, tripping the transformer.
The flow rate at which the paddle activates the relay is normally adjustable. See
your specific transformer instruction manual for details.
Caution: Do not test a bushing while it’s in its wood shipping crate, or while it is
lying on wood. Wood is not as good an insulator as porcelain and will cause the
readings to be inaccurate. Keep the test results as a baseline record to compare
with future tests.
After 1 month of service and yearly, check the external porcelain for cracks
and/or contamination (requires binoculars). There is no “perfect insulator”; a
small amount of leakage current always exists. This current “leaks” through and
along the bushing surface from the high-voltage conductor to ground. If the
bushing is damaged or heavily contaminated, leakage current becomes excessive,
and visible evidence may appear as carbon tracking (treeing) on the bushing
surface. Flashovers may occur if the bushings are not cleaned periodically.
Look carefully for oil leaks. Check the bushing oil level by viewing the oil-sight
glass or the oil level gage. When the bushing has a gage with a pointer, look
carefully, because the oil level should vary a little with temperature changes. If
the pointer never changes, even with wide ambient temperature and load changes,
18
the gage should be checked at the next outage. A stuck gage pointer coupled with
a small oil leak can cause explosive failure of a bushing, damaging the
transformer and other switchyard equipment. A costly extended outage is the
result.
If the oil level is low and there is an external oil leak, check the bolts for proper
torque and the gasket for proper compression. If torque and compression are
correct, the bushing must be replaced with a spare. Follow instructions in the
transformer manual carefully. It is very important that the correct type gasket be
installed and the correct compression be applied. A leaky gasket is probably also
leaking water and air into the transformer, so check the most recent transformer
DGA for high moisture and oxygen.
If the oil level is low and there is no visible external leak, there may be an internal
leak around the lower seal into the transformer tank. If possible, re-fill the
bushing with the same oil and carefully monitor the level and the volume it takes
to fill the bushing to the proper level. If it takes more than one quart, make plans
to replace the bushing. The bushing must be sent to the factory for repair or it
must be junked; it cannot be repaired in the field.
About 90% of all preventable bushing failures are caused by moisture entering
through leaky gaskets, cracks, or seals. Internal moisture can be detected by
Doble testing. See FIST 3-2 [9] and Doble Bushing Field Test Guide [8] for
troubles and corrective actions. Internal moisture causes deterioration of the
insulation of the bushing and can result in explosive failure, causing extensive
transformer and other equipment damage, as well as hazards to workers.
After 1 month of service and yearly, examine the bushings with an IR camera
[4,7]; if one phase shows a markedly higher temperature, there is probably a bad
connection. The connection at the top is usually the poor one; however, a bad
connection inside the transformer tank will usually show a higher temperature at
the top as well. In addition, a bad connection inside the transformer will usually
show hot metal gases (ethane and ethylene) in the DGA.
Once every 3 to 5 years, a close physical inspection and cleaning should be done
[9]. Check carefully for leaks, cracks, and carbon tracking. This inspection will be
required more often in atmospheres where salts and dust deposits appear on the
19
bushings. In conditions that produce deposits, a light application of Dow Corning
grease DC-5 or GE Insulgel will help reduce risk of external flashover. The
downside of this treatment is that a grease buildup may occur. In high humidity
and wet areas, a better choice may be a high quality silicone paste wax applied to
the porcelain, which will reduce the risk of flashover. A spray-on wax containing
silicone, such as Turtle Wax brand, has been found to be very useful for cleaning
and waxing in one operation, providing the deposits are not too hard. Wax will
cause water to form beads rather than a continuous sheet, which reduces
flashover risk. Cleaning may involve just spraying with Turtle Wax and wiping
with a soft cloth. A lime removal product, such as “Lime Away,” also may be
useful. More stubborn contaminates may require solvents, steel wool, and
brushes. A high pressure water stream may be required to remove salt and other
water soluble deposits. Limestone powder blasting with dry air will safely remove
metallic oxides, chemicals, salt-cake, and almost any hard contaminate. Other
materials, such as potters clay, walnut or pecan shells, or crushed coconut shells,
are also used for hard contaminates. Carbon dioxide (CO 2) pellet blasting is more
expensive but virtually eliminates cleanup because it evaporates. Ground up
corn-cob blasting will remove soft pollutants such as old coatings of built-up
grease. A competent experienced contractor should be employed and a thorough
written job hazard analysis (JHA) performed when any of these treatments are
used.
Caution: See the transformer manual for detailed instructions on cleaning and
repairing your specific bushing surfaces. Different solvents, wiping materials, and
cleaning methods may be required for different bushings. Different repair
techniques may also be required for small cracks and chips. Generally, glyptal or
insulating varnish will repair small scratches, hairline cracks, and chips. Sharp
edges of a chip should be honed smooth, and the defective area painted with
insulating varnish to provide a glossy finish. Hairline cracks in the surface of the
porcelain must be sealed because accumulated dirt and moisture in the crack may
result in flashover. Epoxy should be used to repair larger chips. If a bushing
20
insulator has a large chip that reduces the flashover distance or has a large crack
totally through the insulator, the bushing must be replaced. Some manufacturers
offer repair service to damaged bushings that cannot be repaired in the field.
Contact the manufacturer for your particular bushings if you have repair
questions.
The purpose of sealing systems is to prevent air and moisture from contaminating oil
and cellulose insulation. Sealing systems are designed to prevent oil inside the
transformer from coming into contact with air. Air contains moisture, which causes
sludging and an abundant supply of oxygen. Oxygen in combination with moisture
causes greatly accelerated deterioration of the cellulose. This oxygen-moisture
combination will greatly reduce service life of the transformer.
Sealing systems on many existing Reclamation power transformers are of the inert gas
(nitrogen) pressure design; however, we have many other designs. Current practice is
to buy only conservator designs with bladders for transformer voltages 115 kV and
above and capacities above 10 mega-volt-
amps (mva). Below these values, we buy
only inert gas pressure system
transformers, as depicted in figure 8.
21
vented to atmosphere through a breather pipe. The pipe typically is screened to
keep out insects and rodents and turned down to prevent rain from entering.
Breathing is caused by expansion and contraction of the oil as temperature
changes. These earlier designs did not use an air dryer, and condensation from
moisture formed on inside walls and tank top. Moisture, oxygen, and nitrogen
would also dissolve directly into oil from the air. This was not the best design. As
mentioned before, a combination of oxygen and moisture accelerates deterioration
of cellulose insulation. Moisture also decreases dielectric strength, destroying
insulating quality of the oil, and causes formation of sludge. If you have one or
more of these earlier design transformers, it is recommended that a desiccant type
air dryer be added to the breather pipe.
Sealed or Pressurized
Breathing. This design is
similar to the free breathing
one with addition of a
pressure/vacuum bleeder
valve. When the
transformer was installed,
pressurized dry air or
nitrogen was placed on top of
the oil. The bleeder valve is
designed to hold pressure
inside to approximately plus
or minus 5 psi (figure7). The Figure 7.—Pressurized Breathing
same problems with Transformer.
moisture and oxygen occur
as previously described. Problems are not as severe because “breathing” is limited
by the bleeder valve. Air or N2 is exhausted to the outside atmosphere when a
positive pressure more than 5 psi occurs inside the tank. This process does not
add moisture and oxygen to the tank. However, when cooling, the oil contracts
and, if pressure falls 5 psi below the outside atmosphere, the valve allows outside
air into the tank, which pulls in moisture and oxygen.
Once each year, check the pressure gage against the weekly data sheets; if the
pressure never varies with seasonal temperature changes, the gage is defective.
Add nitrogen if the pressure falls below 1 psi to keep moisture laden air from
being pulled in. Add enough N2 to bring the pressure to 2 to 3 psi.
Pressurized Inert Gas Sealed System. This system keeps space above the oil
pressurized with a dry inert gas, normally nitrogen (figure 8). This design
prevents air and moisture from coming into contact with insulating oil. Pressure
is maintained by a nitrogen gas bottle with the pressure regulated normally
between 0.5 and 5 psi. Pressure gages are provided in the nitrogen cubicle for
both high and low pressures (figure 9). A pressure/ vacuum gage is normally
22
connected to read low pressure gas
inside the tank. This gage may be
located on the transformer and
normally has high and low pressure
alarm contacts. See section 4.2.2
which follows.
Caution: The
component part
descriptions below are
for the typical three-
stage pressure
regulating equipment
supplying inert gas to
the transformer. Your
particular unit may be
different, so check your
transformer instruction
manual.
23
2,400 psi. Normally, the gage will be equipped with a low pressure alarm that
activates when the cylinder is getting low (around 500 psi). However, gas will still
be supplied, and the regulating equipment will continue to function until the
cylinder is empty. Refer to figure 9 for the following descriptions.
High Pressure Regulator. The high pressure regulator has two stages. The
input of the first stage is connected to the cylinder, and the output of the first
stage is connected internally to the input of the second stage. This holds output
pressure of the second stage constant. The first stage output is adjustable by a
hand-operated lever and can deliver a maximum of whatever pressure is in the
cylinder (2,400 psi when full) down to zero. The second stage output is varied by
turning the adjusting screw, normally adjusted to supply approximately 10 psi to
the input of the low pressure regulator.
Low Pressure Regulator. The low pressure regulator is the third stage and
controls pressure and flow to the gas space of the transformer. The input of this
regulator is connected to the output of the second stage (approximately 10 psi).
This regulator is typically set at the factory to supply gas to the transformer at a
pressure of approximately 0.5 psi and needs no adjustment. If a different
pressure is required, the regulator can be adjusted by varying spring tension on
the valve diaphragm. Pressure is set at this low value because major pressure
changes inside the transformer come from expansion and contraction of oil. The
purpose of this gas feed is to make up for small leaks in the tank gaskets and
elsewhere so that air cannot enter. Typically, a spring-loaded bleeder for high
pressure relief is built into the regulator and is set at the factory to relieve
pressures in excess of 8 psi. The valve will close when pressure drops below the
setting, preventing further loss of gas.
Bypass Valve Assembly. The bypass valve assembly opens a bypass line around
the low pressure regulator and allows the second stage of the high pressure
regulator to furnish gas directly to the transformer. The purpose of this assembly
is to allow much faster filling/purging of the gas space during initial installation
or if the transformer tank has to be refilled after being opened for inspection.
Caution: During normal operation, the bypass valve must be closed, or pressure
in the tank will be too high.
Oil Sump. The oil sump is located at the bottom of the pressure regulating
system between the low pressure regulator and shutoff valve C. The sump collects
oil and/or moisture that may have condensed in the low pressure fill line. The
drain plug at the bottom of the sump should be removed before the system is put
into operation and also removed once each year during operation to drain any
residual oil in the line. This sump and line will be at the same pressure as the gas
space in the top of the transformer. The sump should always be at a safe pressure
(less than 10 psi) so the plug can be removed to allow the line to purge a few
seconds and blow out the oil. However, always look at the gas space pressure
24
gage on the transformer or the low pressure gage in the nitrogen cabinet, just to
be sure, before removing the drain plug.
Shutoff Valves. The shutoff valves are located near the top of the cabinet for the
purpose of isolating the transformer tank for shipping or maintenance. These
valves are normally of double-seat construction and should be fully opened against
the stop to prevent gas leakage around the stem. A shutoff valve is also provided
for the purpose of shutting off the nitrogen flow to the transformer tank. This
shutoff valve must be closed prior to changing cylinders to keep the gas in the
transformer tank from bleeding off.
Sampling and Purge Valve. The sampling and purge valve is normally located
in the upper right of the nitrogen cabinet. This valve is typically equipped with a
hose fitting; the other side is connected directly to the transformer gas space by
copper tubing. This valve is opened while purging the gas space during a new
installation or maintenance refill and provides a path to exhaust air as the gas
space is filled with nitrogen. This valve is also opened when a gas sample is taken
from the gas space for analysis. When taking gas samples, the line must be
sufficiently purged so that the sample will be from gas above the transformer oil
and not just gas in the line. This valve must be tightly closed during normal
operation to prevent gas leakage.
25
contracts with the oil and isolates it from the
atmosphere. The inside of the bladder or top
of the diaphragm is open to atmospheric
pressure through a desiccant air dryer. As
oil expands and contracts and as
atmospheric pressure changes, the bladder
or diaphragm “breathes” air in and out.
This keeps air and transformer oil
essentially at atmospheric pressure. The oil
level gage on the conservator typically is Figure 11.—Conservator
magnetic, like those mentioned earlier, with Bladder.
except the float is positioned near the center
of the underside of the bladder. With a diaphragm, the level indicator arm rides
on top of the diaphragm. Examine the air dryer periodically and change the
desiccant when approximately one-third of the material changes color.
Note: A vacuum will appear in the transformer if piping between the air dryer
and conservator is too small, if the air intake to the dryer is too small, or if the
piping is partially blocked. The bladder cannot take in air fast enough when the
oil level is decreasing due to rapidly falling temperature. Minium ¾- to 1-inch
piping is recommended. This problem is especially prevalent with transformers
that are frequently in and out of service and located in geographic areas of large
temperature variations. This situation may allow bubbles to form in the oil and
may even activate gas detector relays such as the Buchholz and/or bladder failure
relay. The vacuum may also pull in air around gaskets that are not tight enough
or that have deteriorated (which may also cause bubbles) [4].
Bladder Failure (Gas Accumulator) Relay. The bladder failure relay (not on
diaphragm-type conservators) is mounted on top the conservator for the purpose of
detecting air bubbles in the oil. Shown at right (figure 12) is a modern relay.
Check your transformer VENTS
VALVE
instruction manual for specifics FLOAT
26
Caution: Never open the vent of the bladder failure relay unless you have
vacuum or pressure equipment available. The oil will fall inside the relay and
conservator and pull in air from the outside. You will have to recommission the
relay by valving off the conservator and pressurizing the bladder or by placing a
vacuum on the relay. See your specific transformer instruction manual for details.
Caution: When the transformer, relay, and bladder are new, some air or gas is
normally entrapped in the transformer and piping and takes a while to rise and
activate the relay. Do not assume the bladder has failed if the alarm activates
within 2 to 3 months after it is put into operation. If this occurs, you will have to
recommision the relay with pressure or vacuum. See your specific transformer
instruction manual for details. If no more alarms occur, the bladder is intact. If
alarms continue, look carefully for oil leaks in the conservator and transformer.
An oil leak is usually also an air leak. This may be checked by looking at the
nitrogen and oxygen in the dissolved gas analysis. If these gases are increasing,
there is probably a leak; with a sealed conservator, there should be little of these
gasses in the oil. Nitrogen may be high if the transformer was shipped new filled
with nitrogen.
Every 3 to 5 years, (if the conservator has a diaphragm) remove the conservator
inspection flange and look inside with a flashlight. If there is a leak, oil will be on
top of the diaphragm, and it must be replaced. The new diaphragm material
should be nitrile. If the conservator has a bladder and a bladder failure relay, the
relay will alarm if the bladder develops a leak. If the conservator has a bladder
and does not have a bladder failure relay, inspect the bladder by removing the
mounting flange and look inside with a flashlight. If there is oil in the bottom of
the bladder, a failure has definitely occurred, and the bladder must be replaced.
Follow procedures in the specific transformer instruction manual for draining the
conservator and replacement; designs and procedures vary and will not be covered
here.
27
Changes in gas pressure causes oil to go back and forth between the middle tank
and the conservator. Air containing oxygen and moisture is not in contact with oil
in the main transformer tank. Oxygen and moisture are absorbed by oil in the
conservator tank and interchanged with oil in the middle one. However, since gas
in the middle tank interchanges with gas in the main tank, small amounts of
oxygen and moisture carried by gas still make their way into the transformer.
With this arrangement, the conservator does not have to be located above the
main tank, which reduces the overall height. If you have one or more of these type
transformers without desiccant air dryers, they should be installed.
4.3 Gaskets
Gaskets have several important jobs in sealing systems [6]. A gasket must create a
seal and hold it over a long period of time. It must be impervious and not contaminate
the insulating fluid or gas above the fluid. It should be easily removed and replaced.
It must be elastic enough to flow into imperfections on the sealing surfaces. It must
withstand high and low temperatures and remain resilient enough to hold the seal
even with joint movement from expansion, contraction, and vibration. It must be
resilient enough to not take a “set” even though exposed for a long time to pressure
applied with bolt torque and temperature changes. It must have sufficient strength to
resist crushing under applied load and resist blowout under system pressure or
vacuum. It must maintain its integrity while being handled or installed. If a gasket
fails to meet any of these criteria, a leak will result. Gasket leaks result from
improper torque, choosing the wrong type gasket material, or the wrong size gasket.
Improper sealing surface preparation or the gasket taking a “set” (becoming hard and
losing its resilience and elasticity) will also cause a leak. Usually, gaskets take a set
as a result of temperature extremes and age.
Caution: Take extra care that rust and dirt particles never fall into the
transformer. The results could be catastrophic, when the transformer is
energized.
After rust and scale have been removed, metal surfaces should be coated with Loctite
Master gasket No. 518. This material will cure after you bolt up the gasket, so
additional glue is not necessary. If the temperature is 50 °F or more, you can bolt up
the gasket immediately. This material comes in a kit (part No. 22424) with primer, a
tube of material, and instructions. If these instructions are followed, the seal will last
many years, and the gasket will be easy to remove later if necessary. If the
temperature is under 50 °F, wait about ½ to 1 hour after applying the material to
surfaces before bolting. If you are using cork-nitrile or cork-neoprene, you can also
28
seal gasket surfaces (including the edge of the gasket) with this same material.
Loctite makes other sealers that can be used to seal gaskets such as “Hi-tack.”
GE glyptol No. 1201B-red can also be used to paint gasket and metal surfaces, but it
takes more time and you must be more cautious about temperature. If possible, this
work should be done in temperatures above 70 °F to speed paint curing. Allow the
paint to completely dry before applying glue or the new gasket. It is not necessary to
remove old glyptol or other primer or old glue if the surface is fairly smooth and
uniform.
Caution: Most synthetic rubber compounds, including nitrile (Buna N), contain some
carbon, which makes it semi-conductive. Take extra care and never drop a gasket or
pieces of gasket into a transformer tank. The results could be catastrophic when the
transformer is energized.
Choose the correct replacement gasket. The main influences on gasket material
selection are design of the gasket joint, maximum and minimum operating
temperature, type of fluid contained, and internal pressure of the transformer.
Cork-nitrile should be used if the joint does not have grooves or limits. This
material performs better than cork-neoprene because it does not take a set as easily
and conforms better to mating surfaces. It also performs better at higher
temperatures. Be extra careful when you store this material because it looks like
cork-neoprene (described below), and they easily are mistaken for each other.
Compression is the same as for cork-neoprene, about 45%. Cork-nitrile should recover
80% of its thickness with compression of 400 psi in accordance with ASTM F36.
Hardness should be 60 to 75 durometer in accordance with ASTM D2240. (See
published specifications for E-98 by manufacturer Dodge-Regupol Inc., Lancaster, PA.)
Caution: Cork-nitrile has a shelf life of only about 2 years, so do not order
and stock more than can be used during this time.
Cork-Neoprene mixture (called coroprene) can also be used; however, it does not
perform as well as cork-nitrile. This material takes a set when it is compressed and
should only be used when there are no expansion limiting grooves. Using cork-
neoprene in grooves can result in leaks from expansion and contraction of mating
surfaces. The material is very porous and should be sealed on both sides and edges
with a thin coat of Glyptol No. 1201B red or similar sealer before installing. Glyptol
No. 1201B is a slow drying paint used to seal metal flanges and gaskets, and the paint
should be allowed to dry totally before installation. Once compressed, this gasket
should never be reused. These gaskets should be kept above 35 °F before installation
to prevent them from becoming hard. Gaskets should be cut and sealed (painted)
indoors at temperatures above 70 °F for ease of handling and to reduce paint curing
time. Installing neoprene-cork gaskets when temperatures are at or near freezing
should be avoided because the gasket could be damaged and leak. Cork-neoprene
gaskets must be evenly compressed about 43 to 45%. For example, if the gasket is
¼-inch thick, 0.43 x 0.25 = 0.10. When the gasket is torqued down, it should be
29
compressed about 0.10 inch. Or you may subtract 0.1 from ¼ inch to calculate the
thickness of the gasket after it is compressed. In this case, ¼ = 0.25 so 0.25 minus
0.10 = 0.15 inch would be the final distance between the mating surfaces after the
gasket is compressed. In an emergency, if compression limits are required on this
gasket, split lock washers may be used. Bend the washers until they are flat and
install enough of them (minium of three), evenly spaced, in the center of the gasket
cross section to prevent excessive compression. The thickness of the washers should
be such that the gasket compression is limited to approximately 43%, as explained
above.
Nitrile “NBR” (Buna N) with 50 to 60 Duro (hardness) is generally the material that
should be chosen for most transformer applications.
Caution: Do not confuse this material with Butyl Rubber. Butyl is not a satisfactory
material for transformer gaskets. The terms Butyl and Buna are easily confused, and
care must be taken to make sure Nitrile (Buna N) is always used and never Butyl.
Replace all cork neoprene gaskets with Nitrile if the joint has recesses or
expansion limiting grooves. Be careful to protect Nitrile from sunlight; it is not
sunlight resistant and will deteriorate, even if only the edges are exposed. It should
not be greased when it is used in a nonmovable (static) seal. When joints have to slide
during installation or are used as a moveable seal (such as bushing caps, oil cooler
isolation valves, and tap changer drive shafts), the gasket or O-ring should be
lubricated with a thin coating of DOW No. 111 or No. 714 or equivalent grease. These
are very thin and provide a good seal. Nitrile performs better than cork-neoprene;
when exposed to higher temperatures, it will perform well up to 65 °C (150 °F).
Viton should be used only for gaskets and O-rings in temperatures higher than 65 °C
or for applications requiring motion (shaft seals, etc.). Viton is very tough and wear
resistant; however, it is very expensive ($1,000+ per sheet) and should not be used
unless it is needed for high wear or high temperature applications. Viton should only
be used with compression limiter grooves and recesses. Care should be taken to store
Nitrile and Viton separately, or order them in different colors; the materials look alike
and can be easily confused, and a much more expensive gasket can be installed
unnecessarily. Compression and fill requirements for Viton are the as same as those
for nitrile, outlined above and shown in table 1.
Gasket sizing for standard groove depths. Nitrile is chosen as the example
because it is the most commonly used material for transformer gasketing. As shown
in table 1, nitrile compression should be 25 to 50%. Nitrile sheets are available in
1/16-inch-thick increments.
30
Table 1.—Transformer Gasket Application Summary
Best Percent
Gasket Temperature Compres Compatible UV Best
Material Range -sion Fluids Resist Applications
Neoprene -54 to 60 °C 30 Askarels and Yes Use only with
(use Nitrile except (-65 to 140 °F) to hydrocarbon fluids compression limits or
where there is not good with 33 recesses and use only if
ultraviolet [UV] temp. swings UV resistance is needed
exposure) or use Viton
Note: Viton O-rings are best for wear resistance and tolerating temperature variations. Nitrile (Buna N) can also
be used in low wear applications and temperatures less than 65 °C.
31
thickness that allows less than one-fourth or as much as one-half to protrude above
the groove. Do not try to remove old primer from the groove.
Horizontal groove fill is determined by how wide the groove is. The groove width is
equal to the outer diameter (OD) minus the inner diameter (ID) divided by two:
OD − ID
2
. Or just measure the groove width with an accurate caliper.
The width of the groove minus the width of the gasket is the room left for the gasket to
expand while being compressed. For nitrile, the amount of horizontal room needed is
about 15 to 25%. Therefore, you need to cut the gasket cross section so that it fills
about 75 to 85% of the width of the groove.
8− 6
For example, an 8-inch OD groove with a 6-inch ID, OD − ID is 2 = 1 inch. Therefore,
2
the width of the groove is 1 inch. Because we have to leave 25% expansion space, the
width of the gasket is 75% of 1 inch, or ¾ inch. So that the gasket can expand equally
toward the center and toward the outside, you should leave one-half the expansion
space at the inner diameter of the groove and one-half at the outer. In this example,
there should be a
total space of
25% of 1 inch or
(¼ inch) for
expansion after
the gasket is
inserted, so you
should leave
F-inch space at
the OD and
F-inch space at CROSS SECTION OF CIRCULAR GASKET IN GROOVE
the ID. See
figure 14. Figure 14.—Cross Section of Circular Gasket in Groove.
Always cut the outer diameter first. In this example, the outer diameter would be
8 inches minus ¼ inch, or 7¾ inches.
Note: Since F-inch space is required all around the gasket, ¼ inch must be
subtracted to allowF inch on both sides. The inner diameter would be 6 inches plus
¼ inch or 6¼ inches. Note that ¼ inch is subtracted from the OD but added to the ID.
To check yourself, subtract the inner radius from the outer to make sure you get the
same gasket width calculated above. In this example, 3 I-inches (outer radius, ½ of
7¾), minus 3F inches (inner radius, ½ of 6¼), is ¾ inch, which is the correct gasket
width.
Rectangular Nitrile Gaskets larger than sheet stock on hand can be fabricated by
cutting strips and corners with a table saw or a utility knife with razor blade. Cutting
is easier if a little transformer oil or WD-40 oil is applied. Nitrile is also available in
spools in standard ribbon sizes. The ends may be joined using a cyanoacrylate
32
adhesive (super glue). There are many types of this glue; only a few of them work well
with nitrile, and they all have a very limited shelf life. Remember to always keep
them refrigerated to extend shelf life. The one proven to stand up best to temperature
changes and compression is Lawson Rubber Bonder No. 92081. The Lawson part
number is 90286, and it is available from Lawson Products Co. in Reno, Nevada,
(702-856-1381). Loctite 404 is commonly available at NAPA auto parts stores and
works also but does not survive temperature variations as well. Shelf life is critical. A
new supply should always be obtained when a gasketing job is started; never use an
old bottle that has been on the shelf since the last job.
When bonding the ends of ribbon together, ends should be cut at an angle (scarfed) at
about 15 degrees. The best bond occurs when the length of the angle cut is about
four times the thickness of the gasket. With practice, a craftsperson can cut 15-degree
scarfs with a utility knife. A jig can also be made from wood to hold the gasket at a
15-degree angle for cutting and sanding. The ends may be further fine-sanded or
ground on a fine bench grinder wheel to match perfectly before applying glue. A jig
can be fabricated to hold the gasket at 15 degrees while cutting, sanding, or grinding.
Note: Maximum horizontal fill of the groove should be 75 to 85% as explained above
in the circular gasket section. However, it is not necessary to fill the groove fully to
75% to obtain a good seal. Choose the width of ribbon that comes close to, but does not
exceed, 75 to 80%. If one standard ribbon width fills only 70% of the groove and the
next size standard width fills 90%, choose the size that fills 70%. As in the circular
groove explained above, place the gasket so that expansion space is equal on both
sides. The key point is that the cross sectional area of the gasket remains the
same as the cover is tightened; the thickness decreases, but the width
increases. See below and figure 15.
Caution: Nitrile (Buna N) is a synthetic rubber compound and, as cover bolts are
tightened, the gasket is compressed. Thickness of the gasket is decreased and the
33
width is increased. If a gasket is too large,
rubber will be pressed into the void
between the cover and the sealing surface.
This will prevent a metal-to-metal seal,
and a leak will result. It is best if the cross
sectional area of the gasket is a little
smaller than the groove cross sectional
area. As cover bolts are tightened, the
thickness of the gasket decreases but the
width increases so that cross sectional area
(thickness times the width) remains the
same. Care must be taken to ensure that
the gasket cross sectional area is equal to
or slightly smaller (never larger) than
the groove cross sectional area. This will
provide space for the rubber to expand in
the groove so that it will not be forced out
into the metal-to-metal contact area. (See
figure 15.) If it is forced out into the
“metal-to-metal” seal area, a leak generally
will be the result. When this happens, our
first response is to tighten the bolts, which
bends the cover around the gasket material
in the metal-to-metal contact area. The
leak may stop (or more often not); but the Figure 15.—Cross Section of Gasket
next time the cover is removed, getting a Remains Constant Before Tightening
proper seal is almost impossible because and After. w x d = gw x gt
the cover is bent. Take extra care sizing
the gasket, and these problems won’t occur.
Thin metal conductive shim stock may be folded over the outer perimeter around
approximately one-half the circumference. These pieces of shim stock should be evenly
spaced around the circumference and stick far enough in toward the center so that
they will be held when the bolts are tightened. As an example, if the gasket is
8 inches in diameter, the circumference would be BD or 3.1416 times 8 inches =
25.13 inches in circumference. Fifty percent of 25.13 is about 12½ inches. Cut
12 strips 1-inch wide and long enough to be clamped by the flange top and bottom
34
when tightened. Fold them over the outside edge of the gasket leaving a little more
than 1-inch space between, so that the shim stock pieces will be more or less evenly
spaced around the circumference.
Note: Failure to provide a path for static electric charges to get to ground will result
in corona discharges between the ground sleeve and the bushing flange. The gasket
will be rapidly destroyed, and a leak will be the result.
Proper bolting sequences are illustrated for various type flanges/covers in figure 17.
Bolt numbers show the correct tightening sequences.
The numbers do not have to be followed exactly; however, the diagonal tightening
patterns should be followed. By using proper torque and the illustrated sequence
patterns, sealing problems from improper tightening and uneven pressure on the
gasket can be avoided. Use a torque wrench and torque bolts according to the head
stamp on the bolt. Check manufacturers instruction book for pancake gasket torque
values.
4.4.2 Dissolved Gas Analysis. After 1 month of service and once each
year, and more often if a problem is encountered, do a DGA. This is by far the
most important tool for determining the health of a transformer.
35
Figure 17.—Bolt Tightening Sequences.
36
Although examples will be presented later, there is no universally
accepted means for interpreting DGA [15]. Transformers are very complex.
Aging, chemical actions and reactions, electric fields, magnetic fields, thermal
contraction and expansion, load variations, gravity, and other forces all interact
inside the tank. Externally, through-faults, voltage surges, wide ambient
temperature changes, and other forces such as the earth’s magnetic field and
gravity affect the transformer. There are few if any “cut and dried” DGA
interpretations; even experts disagree. Consultation with others, experience,
study, comparing earlier DGA’s, keeping accurate records of a transformer’s
history, and noting information found when a transformer is disassembled will
increase expertise and provide life extension to this critical equipment.
4.4.3 Key Gas Method of interpreting DGA is set forth in IEEE [11]. Key gases
formed by degradation of oil and paper insulation are hydrogen (H2), methane
(CH4), ethane (C2 H6), ethylene (C2 H4), acetylene (C2 H2), carbon monoxide (CO),
and oxygen (O2). Except for carbon monoxide and oxygen, all these gases are
formed from the degradation of the oil itself. Carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide
(CO2), and oxygen are formed from degradation of cellulose (paper) insulation.
Carbon dioxide, oxygen, nitrogen (N2 ), and moisture can also be absorbed from the
air if there is a oil/air interface, or if there is a leak in the tank. Some of our
transformers have a pressurized nitrogen blanket above the oil and, in these
cases, nitrogen may be near saturation. (See table 4.) Gas type and amounts are
determined by where the fault occurs in the transformer and the severity and
energy of the event. Events range from low energy events such as partial
discharge, which produces hydrogen and trace amounts of methane and ethane, to
very high energy sustained arcing, capable of generating all the gases including
acetylene, which requires the most energy.
Condition 1: Total dissolved combustible gas (TDCG) below this level indicates
the transformer is operating satisfactorily. Any individual combustible gas
exceeding specified levels in table 4 should have additional investigation.
37
Table 4.—Dissolved Key Gas Concentration Limits in Parts Per Million (ppm)
1
CO2 is not included in adding the numbers for TDCG because it is not a combustible gas.
Condition 2: TDCG within this range indicates greater than normal combustible
gas level. Any individual combustible gas exceeding specified levels in table 4
should have additional investigation. A fault may be present. Take DGA samples
at least often enough to calculate the amount of gas generation per day for each
gas. (See table 5 for recommended sampling frequency and actions.)
Condition numbers for dissolved gases given in IEEE C-57-104-1991 (table 4) are
extremely conservative. We have transformers that have operated safely with
individual gases in Condition 4 with no problems; however, they are stable and
gases are not increasing, or are increasing very slowly. If TDCG and individual
gases are increasing significantly (more than 30 ppm/day), the fault is active and
the transformer should be de-energized when Condition 4 levels are reached.
A sudden increase in key gases and the rate of gas production is more
important in evaluating a transformer than the amount of gas. One
exception is acetylene (C2H2). The generation of any amount of this gas above a
few ppm indicates high energy arcing. Trace amounts (a few ppm) can be
generated by a very hot thermal fault (500 °C). A one-time arc caused by a nearby
lightning strike or a high-voltage surge can generate acetylene. If C2H2 is found in
the DGA, oil samples should be taken weekly to determine if additional acetylene
is being generated. If no additional acetylene is found and the level is below the
IEEE Condition 4, the transformer may continue in service. However, if
acetylene continues to increase, the transformer has an active high energy
38
Table 5.—Actions Based on Dissolved Combustible Gas
NOTES: 1. Either the Highest Condition Based on Individual Gas or Total Dissolved Combustible Gas can
determine the condition (1,2,3, or 4) of the transformer [11]. For example, if the TDCG is between 1,941 ppm and
2,630 ppm, this indicates Condition 3. However ,if hydrogen is greater than 1,800 ppm, the transformer is in
Condition 4, as shown in table 4..
2. When the table says “determine load dependence,” this means, if possible, find out if the gas generation rate in
ppm/day goes up and down with load. Perhaps the transformer is overloaded. Take oil samples every time the load
changes; if load changes are too frequent, this may not be possible.
3. To get TDCG generation rate, divide the change in TDCG by the number of days between samples that the
transformer has been loaded. Down-days should not be included. The individual gas generation rate ppm/day is
determined by the same method.
internal arc and should be taken out of service. Further operation is extremely
hazardous and may result in catastrophic failure. Operating a transformer with
an active high energy arc is extremely hazardous.
Table 4 assumes that no previous DGA tests have been made on the transformer
or that no recent history exists. If a previous DGA exists, it should be reviewed
to determine if the situation is stable (gases are not increasing significantly) or
unstable (gases are increasing significantly). Deciding whether gases are
increasing significantly depends on your particular transformer.
39
Compare the current DGA to older DGAs. If the production rate (ppm/day) of any
one of the key gases and/or TDCG (ppm) has suddenly gone up, gases are probably
increasing significantly. Refer to table 5, which gives suggested actions based on
total amount of gas in ppm and rate of gas production in ppm/day.
Before going to table 5, determine transformer status from table 4; that is, look at
the DGA and see if the transformer is in Condition 1, 2, 3, or 4. The condition for
a particular transformer is determined by finding the highest level for any
individual gas or by using the TDCG [11]. Either the individual gas or the
TDCG can give the transformer a higher Condition number, which means it is at
greater risk. If the TDCG number shows the transformer in Condition 3 and an
individual gas shows the transformer in Condition 4, the transformer is in
Condition 4. Always be conservative and assume the worst until proven
otherwise.
Some information has been added to the table from IEEE C57-104-1991; that is,
inferred from the text. To see the exact table, refer to the IEEE Standard.
If it can be determined what is causing gassing and the risk can be assessed, the
sampling interval may be extended. For example, if the core is meggered and an
additional core ground is found, even though table 5 may recommend a monthly
sampling interval, an operator may choose to lengthen the sampling interval,
because the source of the gassing and generation rate is known.
A decision should never be made on the basis of just one DGA. It is very easy to
contaminate the sample by accidently exposing it to air. Mislabeling a sample is
also a common cause of error. Mislabeling could occur when the sample is taken,
or it could be accidently contaminated or mishandled at the laboratory.
Mishandling may allow some gases to escape to the atmosphere and other gases,
such as oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide, to migrate from the atmosphere into
the sample. If you notice a transformer problem from the DGA, the first
thing to do is take another sample for comparison.
In the gas generation chart (figure 18) [13,16] and discussion below, please
note that temperatures at which gases form are only approximate. The figure is
not drawn to scale and is only for purposes of illustrating temperature
relationships, gas types, and quantities. These relationships represent what
generally has been proven in controlled laboratory conditions using a mass
40
Figure 18.—Combustible Gas Generation Versus Temperature.
41
spectrometer. This chart was used by R.R. Rogers of the Central Electric
Generating Board (CEGB) of England to develop the “Rogers Ratio Method” of
analyzing transformers (discussed later).
A vertical band at left shows what gases and approximate relative quantities are
produced under partial discharge conditions. Note that all the gases are given off,
but in much less quantity than hydrogen. It takes only a very low energy event
(partial discharge/corona) to cause hydrogen molecules to form from the oil.
It should be noted that small amounts of H 2, CH4, and CO are produced by normal
aging. Thermal decomposition of oil-impregnated cellulose produces CO, CO 2 , H2,
CH4, and O2. Decomposition of cellulose insulation begins at only about 100 °C or
less. Therefore, operation of transformers at no more than 90 °C is imperative.
Faults will produce internal “hot spots” of far higher temperatures than these, and
the resultant gases show up in the DGA.
Table 6 is a chart of “fault types,” parts of which are paraphrased from the
International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC 60599) [12]. This chart is not
complete. It is impossible to chart every cause and effect due to the extreme
complexity of transformers. DGA must be carefully examined with the idea of
determining possible faults and possible courses of action. These decisions are
based on judgment and experience and are seldom “cut and dried.” Most
professional associations agree that there are two basic fault types, thermal and
electrical. The first three on the chart are electrical discharges, and the last three
are thermal faults.
Ethane and ethylene are sometimes called “hot metal gases.” When these gases
are being generated and acetylene is not, the problem found inside the
transformer normally involves hot metal. This may include bad contacts on the
tap changer or a bad connection somewhere in the circuit, such as a main
transformer lead. Stray flux impinging on the tank (such as in Westinghouse 7M
series transformers) can cause these “hot metal gases.” A shield has been known
42
to become loose and fall and become ungrounded. Static can then build up and
discharge to a grounded surface and produce “hot metal” gases. An unintentional
core ground with circulating currents can also produce these gases. There are
many other examples.
Notice that both type faults (thermal and electrical) may be occurring at once, and
one may cause the other. The associations do not mention magnetic faults;
however, magnetic faults (such as stray magnetic flux impinging the steel tank or
other magnetic structures) also cause hot spots.
Atmospheric gasses (N2, CO2, and O2) can be very valuable in a DGA in
revealing a possible leak. However, as mentioned elsewhere, there are other
reasons these gases are found in DGA. Nitrogen may have come from shipping
the transformer with N 2 inside or from a nitrogen blanket. CO 2 and O2 are formed
by degradation of cellulose. Be very careful; look at several DGAs, and see if
atmospheric gases and possibly moisture levels are increasing. Also look at the
transformer carefully if you can find an oil leak. Moisture and atmospheric gases
will leak inside when the transformer is off and ambient temperature drops. (See
section 4.3 on moisture)
Dissolved gas software. Several companies offer DGA computer software that
diagnose transformer problems. These diagnoses must be used with engineering
judgment and should never be taken at face value. The software is constantly
changing. The Technical Service Center uses “ Transformer Oil Analyst” (TOA) by
Delta x Research. This software uses a composite of several current DGA
methods. Dissolved gas analysis help is available from the TSC at D-8440 and
D8450. Both groups have the above software and experience in diagnosing
transformer problems.
One set of rules that TOA uses to generate alarms is based loosely on IEC 60599
(table 6). These rules are also very useful in daily dissolved gas analysis. They
are based on L1 limits of IEC 60599 except for acetylene. IEC 60599 gives a range
for L1 limits instead of a specific value. TOA uses the average in this range and
then gives the user a “heads up” if a generation rate exceeds 10% of L1 limits per
month. Acetylene is the exception; IEEE sets an L1 limit of 35 ppm (too high),
and IEC sets acetylene range at 3 to 50. TOA picks the lowest number (3 ppm)
and sets the generation rate alarm value at 3 ppm per month.
Notes: If one or more gas generation rates are equal to or exceed G1 limits (10%
of L1 limits per month), you should begin to pay more attention to this
transformer. Reduce the DGA sample interval, reduce loading, plan for future
outage, contact the manufacturer etc.
If one or more combustible gas generation rates are equal to or exceed G2 limits
(50% of L1 limits per month), this transformer should be considered in critical
condition. You may want to reduce sample intervals to monthly or weekly, plan
an outage, plan to rebuild or replace the transformer, etc. If an active arc is
43
Table 6.—TOA L1 Limits and Generation Rate Per Month Alarm Limits
G1 Limits G2 Limits
GAS L1 Limits (ppm per month) (ppm per month)
H2 100 10 50
CH4 75 8 38
C2 H2 3 3 3
C2 H4 75 8 38
C 2 H6 75 8 38
CO 700 70 350
present (C2H2 generation), or if other heat gases are high (above Condition 4 limits
in table 4), and G2 limits are exceeded, the transformer should be removed from
service.
Table 7 is taken from IEC 60599 of key gases, possible faults, and possible
findings. This chart is not all inclusive and should be used with other
information. Additional possible faults are listed on following and preceding
pages.
Transformers are so complex that it is impossible to put all symptoms and causes
into a chart. Several additional transformer problems are listed below; there are
many others.
1. Gases are generated by normal operation and aging, mostly H 2 and CO with
some CH4.
4. A blocked oil duct inside the transformer can cause local overheating,
generating gases.
6. Oil circulating pump problems (bearing wear, impeller loose or worn) can cause
transformer cooling problems.
7. Oil level is too low; this will not be obvious if the level indicator is inoperative.
8. Sludge in the transformer and cooling system. (See “3. Transformer Cooling
Methods.”)
44
Table 7.—Fault Types
H2, possible trace of CH4 and Partial discharges (corona) Weakened insulation from aging
and electrical stress.
C2H6. Possible CO.
H2, CH4, (some CO if discharges Low energy discharges Pinhole punctures in paper
involve paper insulation). (sparking). insulation with carbon and
Possible trace amounts of C2 carbon tracking. Possible
H6 . (May be static discharges) carbon particles in oil. Possible
loose shield, poor grounding of
metal objects
H2, CH4, C2 H6, C2H4, and the High energy discharges Metal fusion, (poor contacts in
key gas for arcing C2 H2 will be tap changer or lead
present perhaps in large (arcing) connections). Weakened
amounts. If C2 H2 is being insulation, from aging and
generated, arcing is still going electrical stress. Carbonized oil.
on. CO will be present if paper is Paper destruction if it is in the
being heated. arc path or overheated.
H2, CO, CH4, C2H6, C2 H4. Thermal fault between 300 °C Paper insulation destroyed. Oil
and 700 °C heavily carbonized.
All the above gases and High energy electrical arcing Same as above with metal
acetylene in large amounts. discoloration. Arcing may have
700 °C and above. caused a thermal fault.
9. Circulating stray currents may occur in the core, structure, and/or tank.
10. An unintentional core ground may cause heating by providing a path for stray
currents.
11. A hot-spot can be caused by a bad connection in the leads or by a poor contact
in the tap changer.
12. A hot-spot may also be caused by discharges of static electrical charges that
build up on shields or core and structures which are not properly grounded.
13. Hot-spots may be caused by electrical arcing between windings and ground,
between windings of different potential, or in areas of different potential on the
same winding, due to deteriorated or damaged insulation.
45
wedges. The result may be arcing in the transformer, beginning at the time of the
fault, or the insulation may be weakened and arcing develop later.
15. Insulation can also be damaged by a voltage surge such as a nearby lightning
strike or switching surge or closing out of step, which may result in immediate
arcing or arcing that develops later.
16. Insulation may be deteriorated from age and simply worn out. Clearances
and dielectric strength are reduced, allowing partial discharges and arcing to
develop. This can also reduce physical strength allowing wedging and windings to
move extensively during a through-fault, causing total mechanical and electrical
failure.
17. High noise level (hum due to loose windings) can generate gas due to heat
from friction. Compare the noise to sister transformers, if possible. Sound level
meters are available at the TSC for diagnostic comparison and to establish
baseline noise levels for future comparison.
Gas Solubility. Solubilities of gases in oil vary with temperature and pressure
[13]. Solubility of all transformer gases vary proportionally up and down with
pressure. Variation of solubilities with temperature is much more complex.
Solubilities of hydrogen, nitrogen, carbon monoxide, and oxygen go up and down
proportionally with temperature. Solubilities of carbon dioxide, acetylene,
ethylene, and ethane are reversed and vary inversely with temperature changes.
As temperature rises, solubilities of these gases go down; and as temperature
falls, their solubilities increase. Methane solubility remains almost constant with
temperature changes. Table 7 is accurate only at standard temperature and
pressure (STP), (25 °C/77 °F) and (14.7 psi/29.93 inches of mercury, which
is standard barometric pressure at sea level). Table 8 shows only relative
differences in how gases dissolve in transformer oil.
46
From the solubility table 8 below, comparing hydrogen with a solubility of 7% and
acetylene with solubility of 400%, you can see that transformer oil has a much
greater capacity for dissolving acetylene. However, 7% hydrogen by volume
represents 70,000 ppm, and 400% acetylene represents 4,000,000 ppm. You will
probably never see a DGA with numbers this high. Nitrogen can approach
maximum level if there is a pressurized nitrogen blanket above the oil. Table 8
shows the maximum amount of each gas that the oil is capable of dissolving at
standard temperature and pressure. At these levels, the oil is said to be
saturated.
Table 8.—Dissolved Gas Solubility in Transformer Oil Accurate Only at STP, 25 °C (77 °F)
and 14.7 psi (29.93 inches of mercury)
Solubility in
Transformer Oil Equivalent
Dissolved Gas Formula (% by Volume) (ppm by Volume) Primary Causes/Sources
Overheated cellulose,
Carbon Dioxide CO2 120.0 1,200,00
atmosphere
47
transformer’s service life to establish a baseline DGA; then take samples at least
annually. The nitrogen and oxygen can be compared with earlier DGAs; and if they
increase, it is a good indication of a leak. If the transformer oil has ever been de-
gassed, nitrogen and oxygen should be low in the DGA. It is extremely important to
keep accurate records over a transformer’s life; when a problem occurs, recorded
information helps greatly in troubleshooting.
4.4.5 Rogers Ratio Method of DGA. Rogers Ratio Method of DGA [18] is an
additional tool that may be used to look at dissolved gases in transformer oil. Rogers
Ratio Method compares quantities of different key gases by dividing one into the
other. This gives a ratio of the amount of one key gas to another. By looking at the
Gas Generation Chart (figure 18), you can see that, at certain temperatures, one gas
will be generated more than another gas. Rogers used these relationships and
determined that if a certain ratio existed, then a specific temperature had been
reached. By comparing a large number of transformers with similar gas ratios and
data found when the transformers were examined, Rogers could then say that
certain faults were present. Like the Key Gas Analysis above, this method is not a
“sure thing” and is only an additional tool to use in analyzing transformer problems.
Rogers Ratio Method, using three-key gas ratios, is based on earlier work by
Doerneburg, who used five-key gas ratios. Ratio methods are only valid if a
significant amount of the gases used in the ratio is present. A good rule is: Never
make a decision based only on a ratio if either of the two gases used in a
ratio is less than 10 times the amount the gas chromatograph can detect
(12). (Ten times the individual gas detection limits are shown in table 9 and below.)
This rule makes sure that instrument inaccuracies have little effect on the ratios. If
either of the gases are lower than 10 times the detection limit, you most likely do not
have the particular problem that this ratio deals with anyway. If the gases are not
at least 10 times these limits, this does not mean you cannot use the Rogers Ratios;
it means that the results are not as certain as if the gases were at least at these
levels. This is another reminder that DGAs are not an exact science and there is no
“one best easy way” to analyze transformer problems. Approximate detection limits
are as follows, depending on the lab and equipment:
When a fault occurs inside a transformer, there is no problem with minium gas
amounts at which the ratio are valid. There will be more than enough gas present.
48
If a transformer has been operating normally for some time and a DGA shows a
sudden increase in the amount of gas, the first thing to do is take a second sample to
verify there is a problem. Oil samples are easily contaminated during sampling or at
the lab. If the next DGA shows gases to be more in line with prior DGAs, the earlier
oil sample was contaminated, and there is no further cause for concern. If the
second sample also shows increases in gases, the problem is real. To apply Ratio
Methods, it helps to subtract gases that were present prior to sudden gas increases.
This takes out gases that have been generated up to this point due to normal aging
and from prior problems. This is especially true for ratios using H 2 and the cellulose
insulation gases CO and CO2 [12]. These are generated by normal aging.
These ratios and the resultant fault indications are based on large numbers of DGAs
and transformer failures and what was discovered after the failures.
There are other ratio methods, but only the Rogers Ratio Method will be discussed
since it is the one most commonly used. The method description is paraphrased from
Rogers’ original paper [18] and from IEC 60599 [12].
Caution: Rogers Ratio Method is for fault analyzing, not for fault detection.
You must have already decided that you have a problem from the total amount of
gas (using IEEE limits) or increased gas generation rates. Rogers Ratios will only
give you an indication of what the problem is; it cannot tell you whether or not you
have a problem. If you already suspect a problem based on total combustible gas
levels or increased rate-of-generation, then you will normally already have enough
gas for this method to work. A good system to determine whether you have a
problem is to use table 5 in the Key Gas Method. If two or more of the key gases are
in condition two and the gas generation is at least 10% per month of the L1 limit,
you have a problem. Also, for the diagnosis to be valid, gases used in ratios should
be at least 10 times the detection limits given earlier. The more gas you have, the
more likely the Rogers Ratio Method will give a valid diagnosis. The reverse is also
true; the less gas you have, the less likely the diagnosis will be valid. If a gas used in
the denominator of any ratio is zero, or is shown in the DGA as not detected (ND),
use the detection limit of that particular gas as the denominator. This gives a
reasonable ratio to use in diagnostic table 9. Zero codes mean that you do not have a
problem in this area.
49
Table 9.—Rogers Ratios for Key Gases
Code range of ratios C2H2 CH4 C2H4 Detection limits and 10 x detection limits are shown below:
C2H4 H2 C2H6 C2H2 1 ppm 10 ppm
C2H4 1 ppm 10 ppm
<0.1 0 1 0 CH4 1 ppm 10 ppm
0.1-1 1 0 0 H2 5 ppm 50 ppm
1-3 1 2 1 C2H6 1 ppm 10 ppm
>3 2 2 2
Case Fault Type Problems Found
0 No fault 0 0 0 Normal aging
1 Low energy partial 1 1 0 Electric discharges in bubbles, caused by insulation voids or super
discharge gas saturation in oil or cavitation (from pumps) or high moisture in
oil (water vapor bubbles).
2 High energy 1 1 0 Same as above but leading to tracking or perforation of solid
partial discharge cellulose insulation by sparking, or arcing; this generally produces
CO and CO2.
3 Low energy 1-2 0 1-2 Continuous sparking in oil between bad connections of different
discharges, potential or to floating potential (poorly grounded shield etc);
sparking, arcing breakdown of oil dielectric between solid insulation materials.
4 High energy 1 0 2 Discharges (arcing ) with power follow through; arcing breakdown of
discharges, arcing oil between windings or coils, or between coils and ground, or load
tap changer arcing across the contacts during switching with the oil
leaking into the main tank.
5 Thermal fault less 0 0 1 Insulated conductor overheating; this generally produces CO and
than 150 °C CO2 because this type of fault generally involves cellulose
(see note 2) insulation.
6 Thermal fault 0 2 0 Spot overheating in the core due to flux concentrations.
temp. range Items below are in order of increasing temperatures of hot spots.
150-300 °C Small hot spots in core. Shorted laminations in core. Overheating
(see note 3) of copper conductor from eddy currents. Bad connection on
winding to incoming lead, or bad contacts on load or no-load tap
7 Thermal fault 0 2 1 changer. Circulating currents in core; this could be an extra core
temp. range ground, (circulating currents in the tank and core); this could also
300-700 °C mean stray flux in the tank.
8 Thermal fault 0 2 2 These problems may involve cellulose insulation which will produce
temp. range over CO and CO2.
700 °C
(see note 4)
Notes: 1. There will be a tendency for ratio C2H2 /C2H4 to rise from 0.1 to above 3 and the ratio C2H4 /C2H6 to rise from 1-3 to above 3
as the spark increases in intensity. The code at the beginning stage will then be 1 0 1.
2. These gases come mainly from the decomposition of the cellulose which explains the zeros in this code.
3. This fault condition is normally indicated by increasing gas concentrations. CH4 /H2 is normally about 1, the actual value above or
below 1, is dependent on many factors such as the oil preservation system (conservator, N2 blanket, etc.), the oil temperature, and oil
quality.
4. Increasing values of C2H2 (more than trace amounts), generally indicates a hot spot higher than 700 °C. This generally indicates
arcing in the transformer. If acetylene is increasing and especially if the generation rate is increasing, the transformer should be de-
energized, further operation is extremely hazardous.
General Remarks:
1. Values quoted for ratios should be regarded as typical (not absolute). This means that the ratio numbers are not “carved in stone”;
there may be transformers with the same problems whose ratio numbers fall outside the ratios shown at the top of the table.
2. Combinations of ratios not included in the above codes may occur in the field. If this occurs, the Rogers Ratio Method will not work
for analyzing these cases.
3. Transformers with on-load tap changers may indicate faults of code type 2 0 2 or 1 0 2 depending on the amount of oil interchange
between the tap changer tank and the main tank.
50
Example 1
Ethylene and ethane are sometimes called “hot metal gases.” Notice this fault
does not involve paper insulation, because CO is very low. H 2 and C2 H2 are both
less than 10 times the detection limit. This means the diagnosis does not have a
100% confidence level of being correct. However, due to the high ethylene, the
fault is probably a bad connection where an incoming lead is bolted to a winding
lead, or perhaps bad tap changer contacts, or additional core ground (large
circulating currents in the tank and core). See the two bottom problems on
table 10 later in this chapter. This example was chosen to show a transformer
that was not a “clear cut” diagnosis. Engineering judgment is always required.
A small quantity of acetylene is present, just above the detection limit of 1 ppm.
This is not high energy arcing due to the small amount; it has more likely been
produced by a one-time nearby lightning strike or a voltage surge.
Example 2
Ethylene (C2H4) 25 4 17
Acetylene (C2H2) 2 0 0
51
Rogers Ratio Analysis Based on Latest DGA:
Codes
Notice that methane is increasing slowly, but ethane had a large increase between
samples 1 and 2 but did not increase between samples 2 and 3. Note that two key
gases (CH2 and C2H6) are above IEEE Condition 1 in table 5, so the Rogers Ratio
Method is valid. By referring to table 9, this combination of codes is Case 6, which
indicates the transformer has a thermal fault in the temperature range of 150 °C
to 300 °C.
Life history of the transformer must be examined carefully. It is, again, very
important to keep accurate records of every transformer. This information is
invaluable when it becomes necessary to do an evaluation.
The transformer in this example is one of three sister transformers that have had
increased cooling installed and are running higher loads due to a generator
upgrade several years ago. Transformer sound level (hum) is markedly higher
than for the two sister transformers. The unit breaker experienced a fault some
years ago, which placed high mechanical stresses on the transformer. This
generally means loose windings, which can generate gas due to friction (called a
thermal fault) by Rogers Ratios. Comparison with sister units reveals almost
triple the ethane as the other two, and it is above the IEEE Condition 4.Gases are
increasing slowly; there has been no sudden rate increase in combustible gas
production. Notice the large increase in O 2 and N2 between the first and second
DGA and the large decrease between the second and third. This probably means
that the oil sample was exposed to air (atmosphere) and that these two gases are
inaccurate in the middle sample.
Carbon Dioxide Carbon Monoxide Ratio. This ratio is not included in the
Rogers Ratio Method of analysis. However, it is useful to determine if a fault is
affecting the cellulose insulation. This ratio is included in transformer oil
analyzing software programs such as Delta X Research Transformer Oil Analyst.
This analysis is available from the TSC at D-8440 and D-8450 in Denver.
Formation of CO2 and CO from the degradation of oil impregnated paper increases
rapidly with temperature. CO 2 /CO ratios less than three are generally considered
an indication of probable paper involvement in an electrical fault (arcing or
sparking), along with some carbonization of paper. Normal CO 2 /CO ratios are
typically around seven. Ratios above 10 generally indicate a thermal fault with
the involvement of cellulose. This is only true if the CO2 came from within
the transformer (no leaks), and these ratios are only meaningful if there
is a significant amount of both gases. Caution must be employed because oil
52
degradation also produces these gases, and CO 2 can also be dissolved in the oil
from atmospheric leaks. The oil sample can also pick up CO 2 and O2 if it is
exposed to air during sampling or handling at the lab. If a fault is suspected, look
carefully to see if CO is increasing. If CO is increasing around 70 ppm or more per
month (generation limit from IEC 60599), there is probably a fault. It is a good
idea to subtract the amount of CO and CO2 shown before the increase in CO and
CO2 began, so that only gases caused by the present fault are used in the ratio.
This will eliminate CO and CO2 generated by normal aging and other sources.
When excessive cellulose degradation is suspected (CO 2 /CO ratios less than 3, or
greater than 10), it may be advisable to ask for a furan analysis with the next
DGA. This will give an indication of useful life left in the paper insulation [12].
You cannot de-energize a transformer based on furan analysis alone. All this test
does is give an indication of the health of the paper; it is not a sure thing. But
furan analysis is recommended by many experts to give an indication of remaining
life when the CO2 /CO ratio is less than 3 or greater than 10. Some oil
laboratories do this test on a routine basis, and some charge extra for it.
Table 10 is adapted from IEC 60599 Appendix A.1.1 [12]. Some of the wording
has been changed to reflect American language usage rather than European.
Reclamation specifies that manufacturers dry new transformers to no more than 0.5%
M/DW during commissioning. In a transformer having 10,000 pounds of paper
insulation, this means that 10,000 x 0.005 = 50 pounds of water (about 6 gallons) is in
the paper. This is not enough moisture to be detrimental to electrical integrity. When
the transformer is new, this water is distributed equally through the transformer. It
is extremely important to remove as much water as possible.
53
Table 10.—Typical Faults in Power Transformers [12]
Fault Examples
Discharges of Sparking or arcing between bad connections of different floating potential, from
low energy shielding rings, toroids, adjacent discs or conductors of different windings,
broken brazing, closed loops in the core. Additional core grounds. Discharges
between clamping parts, bushing and tank, high voltage and ground, within
windings. Tracking in wood blocks, glue of insulating beam, winding spacers.
Dielectric breakdown of oil, load tap changer breaking contact.
Discharges of Flashover, tracking or arcing of high local energy or with power follow-through.
high energy Short circuits between low voltage and ground, connectors, windings, bushings,
and tank, windings and core, copper bus and tank, in oil duct. Closed loops
between two adjacent conductors around the main magnetic flux, insulated bolts
of core, metal rings holding core legs.
Overheating less Overloading the transformer in emergency situations. Blocked or restricted oil
than 300 °C flow in windings. Other cooling problem, pumps valves, etc. See the “Cooling”
section in this document. Stray flux in damping beams of yoke.
Overheating Defective contacts at bolted connections (especially busbar), contacts within tap
changer, connections between cable and draw-rod of bushings.
300 to 700 °C Circulating currents between yoke clamps and bolts, clamps and laminations, in
ground wiring, bad welds or clamps in magnetic shields.
Abraded insulation between adjacent parallel conductors in windings.
Overheating Large circulating currents in tank and core. Minor currents in tank walls created
over 700 °C by high uncompensated magnetic field. Shorted core laminations.
Notes:
1. X wax formation comes from Paraffinic oils (paraffin based). These are not used in transformers at present
in the United States but are predominate in Europe.
2. The last overheating problem in the table says "over 700 °C.” Recent laboratory discoveries have found
that acetylene can be produced in trace amounts at 500 °C, which is not reflected in this table. We have several
transformers that show trace amounts of acetylene that are probably not active arcing but are the result of high-
temperature thermal faults as in the example. It may also be the result of one arc, due to a nearby lightning strike or
voltage surge.
3. A bad connection at the bottom of a bushing can be confirmed by comparing infrared scans of the top of the
bushing with a sister bushing. When loaded, heat from a poor connection at the bottom will migrate to the top of the
bushing, which will display a markedly higher temperature. If the top connection is checked and found tight, the
problem is probably a bad connection at the bottom of the bushing.
54
When the transformer is energized, water begins to migrate to the coolest part of the
transformer and the site of the greatest electrical stress. This location is normally the
insulation in the lower one-third of the winding [5]. Paper insulation has a much
greater affinity for water than does the oil. The water will distribute itself unequally,
with much more water being in the paper than in the oil. The paper will partially dry
the oil by absorbing water out of the oil. Temperature is also a big factor in how the
water distributes itself between the oil and paper. See table 11 below for comparison.
The table above shows the tremendous attraction that paper insulation has for water.
The ppm of water in oil shown in the DGA is only a small part of the water in the
transformer. It is important that, when an oil sample is taken, you record the oil
temperature from the top oil temperature gage.
Some laboratories give percent M/DW of the insulation in the DGA. Others give
percent oil saturation, and some give only the ppm of water in the oil. If you have an
accurate temperature of the oil and the ppm of water, the Nomograph (figure 23,
section 4.5.2) will give percent M/DW of the insulation and the percent oil saturation.
Where does the water come from? Moisture can be in the insulation when it is
delivered from the factory. If the transformer is opened for inspection, the insulation
can absorb moisture from the atmosphere. If there is a leak, moisture can enter in the
form of water or humidity in air. Moisture is also formed by the degradation of
insulation as the transformer ages. Most water penetration is flow of wet air or rain
water through poor gasket seals due to pressure difference caused by transformer
cooling. During rain or snow, if a transformer is removed from service, some
transformer designs cool rapidly and the pressure inside drops. The most common
moisture ingress points are gaskets between bushing bottoms and the transformer top
and the pressure relief device gasket. Small oil leaks, especially in the oil cooling
piping, will also allow moisture ingress. With rapid cooling and the resultant pressure
drop, relatively large amounts of water and water vapor can be pumped into the
transformer in a short time. It is important to repair small oil leaks; the small
amount of visible oil is not important in itself, but it also indicates a point where
moisture will enter [22].
It is critical for life extension to keep transformers as dry and as free of oxygen as
possible. Moisture and oxygen cause the paper insulation to decay much faster than
normal and form acids, sludge, and more moisture. Sludge settles on windings and
55
inside the structure, causing transformer cooling to be less efficient, and slowly over
time temperature rises. (This was discussed earlier in “3. Transformer Cooling
Methods.”) Acids cause an increase in the rate of decay, which forms more acid,
sludge, and moisture at a faster rate [20]. This is a vicious cycle of increasing speed
forming more acid and causing more decay. The answer is to keep the transformer as
dry as possible and as free of oxygen as possible. In addition, oxygen inhibitor should
be watched in the DGA testing. The transformer oil should be dried when moisture
reaches the values according to table 12. Inhibitor should be added (0.3% by weight
ASTM D-3787) when the oil is processed.
56
cools, dissolved moisture forms an emulsion [20]. A water/oil emulsion causes drastic
reduction in dielectric strength.
How much moisture in insulation is too much? When the insulation gets to 2.5%
M/DW or 30% oil saturation (given on some DGAs), the transformer should have a dry
out with vacuum if the tank is rated for vacuum. If the transformer is old, pulling a
vacuum can do more harm than good. In this case, it is better to do round-the-clock re-
circulation with a Bowser drying the oil as much as possible, which will pull water out
of the paper. At 2.5% M/DW, the paper insulation is degrading much faster than
normal [5]. As the paper is degraded, more water is produced from the decay
products, and the transformer becomes even wetter and decays even faster. When a
transformer gets above 4% M/DW, it is in danger of flashover if the temperature rises
to 90 °C.
57
estimate the percent saturation based on where the point is located. For example, if
the water is 30 ppm and the temperature is 40 °C, you can see on the curves that this
point of intersection falls about halfway between the 20% curve and the 30% curve.
This means that the oil is approximately 25% saturated. Curves shown on figure 20
are from IEEE 62-1995 [19].
58
keep in mind that the life of the transformer is the life of the insulation. The
insulation is quickly degraded by excess moisture and the presence of oxygen.
Base any decisions on several DGAs over a period of time and establish a trend of
increasing moisture.
If the lab does not provide the percent M/DW, IEEE 62-1995 [19] gives a method.
From the curve (figure 22), find temperature of the bottom oil sample and add
5 °C. Do not use the top oil temperature. This approximates temperature of the
bottom third (coolest part) of the winding, where most of the water is located.
From this temperature, move up vertically to the curve. From this point on the
curve, move horizontally to the left and find the Myers Multiplier number. Take
this number and multiply the ppm of water shown on the DGA. The result is
percent M/DW in the upper part of the insulation. This method gives less amount
of water than the General Electric nomograph on the following page.
59
This nomograph,
published by General
Electric in 1974 (figure
23), gives the percent
saturation of oil and
percent M/DW of
insulation. Use the
nomograph to check
yourself after you have
completed the method
illustrated in figure 22.
The nomograph in
figure 23 will show
more moisture than the
IEEE method.
60
the % M/DW at about 3.75%. The cooler the oil, the higher the moisture
percentage for the same ppm of water in the oil.
Do not make a decision on dryout based on only one DGA and one calculation; it
should be based on trends over a period of time. Take additional samples and
send them for analysis. Take extra care to make sure the oil temperature is
correct. You can see by the nomograph that moisture content varies
dramatically with temperature. Take extra care that the sample is not exposed
to air. If after using the more conservative IEEE method and again subsequent
samples show M/DW is 2.5% or more and the oil is 30% saturated or more, the
transformer should be dried as soon as possible. Check the nomograph and curves
above to determine the percent saturation of the oil. The insulation is degrading
much faster than normal due to the high moisture content. Drying can be an
expensive process; it is prudent to consult with others before making a final
decision to do dryout. However, it is much less expensive to perform a dryout
than to allow a transformer to degrade faster than normal, substantially
shortening transformer life.
4.6 Transformer Oil Tests That Should Be Done Annually With the Dissolved
Gas Analysis.
4.6.1 Dielectric Strength. This test measures the voltage at which the oil
electrically breaks down. The test gives a good indication of the amount of
contaminants (water and oxidation particles) in the oil. DGA laboratories
typically use ASTM Test Method No. D-877 or D-1816. The acceptable minium
breakdown voltage is 30 kV for transformers 287.5 kV and above, and
25 kV for high voltage transformers rated under 287.5 kV. If the dielectric
strength test falls below these numbers, the oil should be reclaimed. Do not base
any decision on one test result, or on one type of test; instead, look at all the
information over several DGAs and establish trends before making any decision.
The dielectric strength test is not extremely valuable; moisture in
combination with oxygen and heat will destroy cellulose insulation long
before the dielectric strength of the oil has given a clue that anything is
going wrong [5]. The dielectric strength test also reveals nothing about acids
and sludge. The tests explained below are much more important.
4.6.2 Interfacial Tension (IFT). This test (ASTM D-791-91) [21], is used by
DGA laboratories to determine the interfacial tension between the oil sample and
distilled water. The oil sample is put into a beaker of distilled water at a
temperature of 25 °C. The oil should float because its specific gravity is less than
that of water, which is one. There should be a distinct line between the two
liquids. The IFT number is the amount of force (dynes) required to pull a small
wire ring upward a distance of 1 centimeter through the water/oil interface. (A
dyne is a very small unit of force equal to 0.000002247 pound.) Good clean oil will
make a very distinct line on top of the water and give an IFT number of 40 to
50 dynes per centimeter of travel of the wire ring.
61
As the oil ages, it is contaminated by tiny particles (oxidation products) of the oil
and paper insulation. These particles extend across the water/oil interface line
and weaken the tension between the two liquids. The more particles, the weaker
the interfacial tension and the lower the IFT number. The IFT and acid numbers
together are an excellent indication of when the oil needs to be reclaimed. It is
recommended the oil be reclaimed when the IFT number falls to 25 dynes per
centimeter. At this level, the oil is very contaminated and must be reclaimed to
prevent sludging, which begins around 22 dynes per centimeter. See FIST 3-5
[20].
If oil is not reclaimed, sludge will settle on windings, insulation, etc., and cause
loading and cooling problems discussed in an earlier section. This will greatly
shorten transformer life.
There is a definite
relationship between the acid
number, the IFT, and the
number of years in service.
The accompanying curve
(figure 24) shows the
relationship and is found in
many publications. (It was
originally published in the
AIEE transactions in 1955.)
Notice that the curve shows
the normal service limits both
for the IFT and the acid
number.
Figure 24.—Interfacial Tension, Acid
4.6.3 Acid Number. Acid
Number, Years in Service.
number (acidity) is the
amount of potassium hydroxide (KOH) in milligrams (mg) that it takes to
neutralize the acid in 1 gram (gm) of transformer oil. The higher the acid number,
the more acid is in the oil. New transformer oils contain practically no acid.
Oxidation of the insulation and oils forms acids as the transformer ages. The
oxidation products form sludge and precipitate out inside the transformer. The
acids attack metals inside the tank and form soaps (more sludge). Acid also
attacks cellulose and accelerates insulation degradation. Sludging has been found
to begin when the acid number reaches 0.40; it is obvious that the oil should be
reclaimed before it reaches 0.40. It is recommended that the oil be reclaimed
when it reaches 0.20 mg KOH/gm [20]. As with all others, this decision must
not be based on one DGA test, but watch for rising trend in the acid number each
year. Plan ahead and begin budget planning before the acid number reaches 0.20.
4.6.4 Test for Oxygen Inhibitor Every 3 to 5 Years with the Annual
DGA Test. In previous sections, the need to keep the transformer dry and O 2 free
was emphasized. Moisture is destructive to cellulose and even more so in the
62
presence of oxygen. Some publications state that each time you double the
moisture (ppm), you halve the life of the transformer. As was discussed, acids are
formed that attack the insulation and metals which form more acids, causing a
viscous cycle. Oxygen inhibitor is a key to extending the life of transformers. The
inhibitor currently used is Ditertiary Butyl Paracresol (DBPC). This works sort of
like a sacrificial anode in grounding circuits. The oxygen attacks the inhibitor
instead of the cellulose insulation. As this occurs and the transformer ages, the
inhibitor is used up and needs to be replaced. The ideal amount of DBPC is 0.3%
by total weight of the oil (ASTM D-3487).
Have the inhibitor content tested with the DGA every 3 to 5 years. If the inhibitor
is 0.08% the transformer is considered uninhibited, and the oxygen freely attacks
the cellulose. If the inhibitor falls to 0.1%, the transformer should be re-inhibited.
For example, if your transformer tested 0.1%, you need to go to 0.3% by adding
0.2% of the total weight of the transformer oil. The nameplate gives the weight of
oil—say 5,000 pounds—so 5,000 pounds X 0.002 = 10 pounds of DBPC needs to be
added. It’s ok if you get a little too much DBPC; this does not hurt the oil.
Dissolve 10 pounds of DBPC in transformer oil that you have heated to the same
temperature as the oil inside the transformer. It may take some experimentation
to get the right amount of oil to dissolve the DBPC. Mix the oil and inhibitor in a
clean container until all the DBPC is dissolved. Add this mixture to the
transformer using the method given in the transformer instruction manual for
adding oil.
Caution: Do not attempt this unless you have had experience. Contact an
experienced contractor or experienced Reclamation people if you need help.
4.6.5 Power Factor. Power factor indicates the dielectric loss (leakage current)
of the oil. This test may be done by the DGA laboratories. It may also be done by
Doble testing. A high power factor indicates deterioration and/or contamination
by-products such as water, carbon, or other conducting particles; metal soaps
caused by acids (formed as mentioned above); attacking transformer metals; and
products of oxidation. The DGA labs normally test the power factor at 25 °C and
100 °C. Doble information [23] indicates the in-service limit for power factor is
less than 0.5% at 25 °C. If the power factor is greater than 0.5% and less than
1.0%, further investigation is required; the oil may require replacement or fullers
earth filtering. If the power factor is greater than 1.0% at 25 °C, the oil may
cause failure of the transformer; replacement or reclaiming is required.
Above 2%, the oil should be removed from service and reclaimed or replaced
because equipment failure is a high probability.
4.6.6 Furans. Furans are a family of organic compounds which are formed by
degradation of paper insulation (ASTM D-5837). Overheating, oxidation, and
degradation by high moisture content contribute to the destruction of insulation
63
and form furanic compounds. Changes in furans between DGA tests are more
important than individual numbers. The same is true for dissolved gases.
Transformers with greater than 250 parts per billion (ppb) should be investigated
because paper insulation is being degraded. Also look at the IFT and acid
number.
Doble in-service limits are reproduced below to support the above recommended
guidelines.
Voltage Class
2 2 2
Water Content, D 1533, ppm, max. 35 25 20
3 3 3
Soluble Sludge ND ND ND
1
D 877 test is not as sensitive to dissolved water as the D 1816 test and should not be used with oils for extra high voltage
(EHV) equipment. Dielectric breakdown tests do not replace specific tests for water content.
2
The use of absolute values of water-in-oil (ppm) do not always guarantee safe conditions in electrical apparatus. The percent
by dry weight should be determined from the curves provided. See the information in section. “4.5 Moisture Problems.”
3
ND = None detectable.
These recommended limits for in-service oils are not intended to be used as absolute requirements for removing oil from
service but to provide guidelines to aid in determining when remedial action is most beneficial. Remedial action will vary
depending upon the test results. Reconditioning of oil, that is, particulate removal (filtration) and drying, may be required if the
dielectric breakdown voltage or water content do not meet these limits. Reclamation (clay filtration) or replacement of the oil may
be required if test values for power factor, interfacial tension, neutralization number, or soluble sludge do not meet recommended
limits.
64
Additional guidelines given in table 13 have been found useful.
Power factor at 25 °C
> 0.5 < 1.0% Investigate, oil may require replacement or clay treatment
> 1.0 < 2.0% Investigate, oil may cause failure of the equipment, oil may require
replacement or clay treatment
> 2.0% Remove from service, investigate, oil may require replacement or
clay treatment
$ 0.05 < 0.15 $ 22 < 25 Clay treat or replace at convenience $ 345 kV, clay treat or
replace in immediate future
$0.15 < 0.5 $16 > 22 Clay treat or replace in immediate future
65
4.6.7 Taking Oil Samples for DGA. Sampling procedures and lab handling are
usually areas that cause the most problems in getting an accurate DGA. There
are times when atmospheric gases, moisture, or hydrogen take a sudden leap from
one DGA to the next. As has been mentioned, at these times, one should
immediately take another sample to confirm DGA values. It is, of course, possible
that the transformer has developed an atmospheric leak, or that a fault has
suddenly occurred inside. More often, the sample has not been taken properly, or
it has been contaminated with atmospheric gases or mishandled in other ways.
The sample must be protected from all contamination, including atmospheric
exposure.
Do not take samples from the small sample ports located on the side of the large
sample (drain) valves. These ports are too small to adequately flush the large
valve and pipe nipple connected to the tank; in addition, air can be drawn past the
threads and contaminate the sample. Fluid in the valve and pipe nipple remain
dormant during operation and can be contaminated with moisture, microscopic
stem packing particles, and other particles. The volume of oil in this location can
also be contaminated with gases, especially hydrogen. Hydrogen is one of the
easiest gasses to form. With hot sun on the side of the transformer tank where
the sample valve is located, high ambient temperature, high oil temperature, and
captured oil in the sample valve and extension, hydrogen formed will stay in this
area until a sample is drawn.
The large sample (drain) valve can also be contaminated with hydrogen by
galvanic action of dissimilar metals. Sample valves are usually brass, and a brass
pipe plug should be installed when the valve is not being used. If a galvanized or
black iron pipe is installed in a brass valve, the dissimilar metals produce a
thermocouple effect, and circulating currents are produced. As a result, hydrogen
is generated in the void between the plug and valve gate. If the valve is not
flushed very thoroughly the DGA will show high hydrogen.
Oil should not be sampled for DGA purposes when the transformer is at or below
freezing temperature. Test values which are affected by water (such as dielectric
strength, power factor, and dissolved moisture content) will be inaccurate.
If negative pressure (vacuum) is not too high, the weight of oil (head) will make
positive pressure at the sample valve, and it will be safe to take a sample. Oil
66
head is about 2.9 feet (2 feet 10.8 inches) of oil per pounds per square inch (psi). If
it is important to take the sample even with a vacuum showing at the top, proceed
as described below.
Use the sample tubing and adaptors described below to adapt the large sample
valve to F-inch tygon tubing. Fill a length (2 to 3 feet) of tygon tubing with new
transformer oil (no air bubbles) and attach one end to the pipe plug and the other
end to the small valve. Open the large sample (drain) valve a small amount and
very slowly crack open the small valve. If oil in the tygon tubing moves
toward the transformer, shut off the valves immediately. Do not allow air
to be pulled into the transformer. If oil moves toward the transformer, there
is a vacuum at the sample valve. Wait until the pressure is positive before taking
the DGA sample. If oil is pushed out of the tygon tubing into the waste container,
there is a positive pressure and it is safe to proceed with DGA sampling. Shut off
the valves and configure the tubing and valves to take the sample per the
instructions below.
DGA Oil Sample Container. Glass sample syringes are recommended. There
are different containers such as stainless steel vacuum bottles and others. It is
recommended that only glass syringes be used. If there is a small leak in the
sampling tubing or connections, vacuum bottles will draw air into the sample,
which cannot be seen inside the bottle. The sample will show high atmospheric
gases and high moisture if the air is humid. Other contaminates such as
suspended solids or free water cannot be seen inside the vacuum bottle. Glass
syringes are the simplest to use because air bubbles are easily seen and expelled.
Other contaminates are easily seen, and another sample can be immediately
taken if the sample is contaminated. The downside is that glass syringes must be
handled carefully and must be protected from direct sunlight. They should be
returned to their shipping container immediately after taking a sample. If they
are exposed to sunlight for any time, hydrogen will be generated and the DGA will
show false hydrogen readings.
For these reasons, glass syringes are recommended, and the instructions below
include only this sampling method.
Obtain a brass pipe plug (normally 2 inches) that will thread into the sample
valve at the bottom of the transformer. Drill and tap the pipe plug for F-inch
NPT and insert a F-inch pipe nipple (brass if possible) and attach a small F-inch
valve for controlling the sample flow. Attach a F-inch tygon tubing adaptor to the
small valve outlet. Sizes of the piping and threads above do not matter; any
arrangement with a small sample valve and adaptor to F-inch tygon tubing will
suffice. See figure 25.
67
Taking the Sample.
• Re-open the valve slightly and flush approximately 1 quart into the waste
container.
• Install the brass pipe plug (described above) and associated F-inch pipe and
small valve, and a short piece of new F-inch tygon tubing to the outlet of the
F-inch valve.
• Never use the same sample tubing on different transformers. This is one way
a sample can be contaminated and give false readings.
• Open both the large valve and small sample valve and allow another quart to
flush through the sampling apparatus. Close both valves. Do this before
attaching the glass sample syringe. Make sure the short piece of tygon tubing
that will attach to the sample syringe is installed on the F-inch valve before
you do this.
• Install the glass sample syringe on the short piece of F-inch tubing. Turn the
stopcock handle on the syringe so that the handle points toward the syringe.
Note: The handle always points toward the closed port. The other two
ports are open to each other. See figure 26.
68
• Open the large sample valve a small amount and adjust the F-inch valve so
that a gentle flow goes through the flushing port of the glass syringe into the
waste bucket.
• Slowly turn the syringe stopcock handle so that the handle points to the
flushing port (figure 27). This closes the flushing and allows oil to flow into
the sample syringe. Do not pull the syringe handle; this will create a vacuum
and allow bubbles to form. The syringe handle (piston) should back out very
slowly. If it moves
too fast, adjust the
small F-inch valve
until the syringe
slows, and hold
your hand on the
back of the piston so
Figure 27.—Sample Syringe (Filling). you can control the
travel.
• Allow a small amount, about 10 cubic centimeters (cc), to flow into the syringe
and turn the stopcock handle again so that it points to the syringe. This will
again allow oil to come out of the flushing port into the waste bucket.
• Reattach the tygon tubing. This will again allow oil to flow out of the flushing
port. Slowly turn the stopcock handle toward the flushing port which again
will allow oil to fill the syringe. The syringe piston will again back slowly out
of the syringe. Allow the syringe to fill about 80% full. Hold the piston so you
can stop its movement at about 80% filled.
Caution: Do not pull the piston. This will cause bubbles to form.
69
• Close the stopcock by turning the handle toward the syringe. Oil again will
flow into the waste container. Shut off both valves, remove the sampling
apparatus, and reinstall the original pipe plug.
Caution: Do not eject any bubbles that form after the sample is collected;
these are gases that should be included in the lab sample.
• Carefully package the syringe in the same manner that it was shipped to the
facility and send it to the lab for processing.
70
some time during manufacture of the transformer and manufacturer and storage
of silicone oil itself. Therefore, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide are easily
formed and dissolved in the silicone due to the abundance of oxygen in the oil
resulting from this atmospheric exposure. In normal new silicone transformers
(no faults), both carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide will be generated in the
initial years of operation. As the transformer ages and oxygen is depleted,
generation of these gases slows and concentrations level off [25]. See figure 29
below for the relationship of decreasing oxygen and increasing carbon monoxide
and carbon dioxide as a transformer ages. This curve is for general information
only and should not be taken to represent any particular transformer. A real
transformer with changes in loading, ambient temperatures, and various duty
cycles would make these curves look totally different.
After the
transformer is
older (assuming no
faults have
occurred), oxygen
concentration will
reach equilibrium
(figure 29).
Reaching
equilibrium may
take a few years
depending on the
size of the
transformer,
loading, ambient
temperatures, etc.
After this time,
oxygen, carbon
monoxide, and Figure 29.—Relationship of Oxygen to Carbon
carbon dioxide Dioxide and Carbon Monoxide as Transformer Ages.
level off and the
rate of production of these gases from normal aging should be relatively constant.
If generation rates of these gases change greatly (seen from the DGA), a fault has
occurred, either thermal or electrical. Rate of generation of these gases and
amounts can be used to roughly determine what the fault is. Once you notice an
significant increase in rate of generation of any gas, it is a good idea to subtract
the amount of gas that was already in the transformer before this increase. This
ensures that gases used in the diagnosis are only gases that were generated after
the fault began.
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occurring and is producing CO and small amounts of methane and hydrogen, the
fault may be masked by the normal production of CO from the silicone oil itself. If
the CO generation rate has greatly increased, along with other gases, it becomes
obvious that a fault has occurred. The furan analysis can only tell you if the paper
is involved (being heated) in the fault.
Some general conclusions can be drawn by comparing silicone oil and mineral oil
transformers.
1. All silicone oil filled transformers will have a great deal more CO than normal
mineral oil filled transformers. CO can come from two sources, the oil itself and
from degradation of paper insulation. If the DGA shows little other fault in gas
generation besides CO, the only way to tell for certain if CO is coming from paper
degradation (a fault) is to run a furan analysis with the DGA. If other fault gases
are also being generated in significant amounts, in addition to CO, obviously there
is a fault, and CO is coming from paper degradation.
6. Once the transformer has matured and the oxygen has leveled off and
remained relatively constant for two or more DGA samples, if you see a sudden
increase in oxygen, and perhaps carbon dioxide and nitrogen, the transformer has
developed a leak.
In table 14 below are IEEE limits [26], compared with Doble [25] in a study of
299 operating transformers. The table of gases from the Doble study seems more
realistic. They show gas level average of 95% of transformers in the study. Note,
with the last four gases, limits given by the IEEE (trial use guide) run over 70%
higher than the Doble 95% norms. But with the first three gases, hydrogen,
methane, and ethane, the IEEE limits are well below the amount of gas found in
95% norms in the Doble study. We obviously cannot have limits that are
below the amount of gas found in normal operating transformers.
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Therefore, it is suggested that we use the Doble (95% norm) limits. The
95% norm limit means that 95% of the silicone oil transformers studied had gas
levels below these limits. Obviously, 5% had gases higher than these limits.
These are problem transformers that we should pay more attention to.
Ethane 26 30
Ethylene 17 30
Acetylene 0.6 1
CO 1,749 3,000
In table 15, the IEEE limits for L1 were chosen. For L2 limits, a statistical
analysis was applied, and two standard deviations were added to L1 to obtain L2.
For L3 limits, the L1 limits were doubled.
L1 L2 L3 G1 G2
Gas (ppm) (ppm) (ppm) (ppm per month) (ppm per month)
Ethane 30 40 60 3 15
Ethylene 30 25 60 3 15
Acetylene 1 2 3 1 1
Gas generation rate limits G1 are 10% of L1 limits per month. G2 generation rate
limits are 50% of L1 limits per month. These basic concepts were taken from IEC
60599 [12], for mineral oil transformers and applied to silicone oil transformers
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due to absence of any other criteria. As our experience grows in silicone DGA,
these may have to be changed, but they will be used in the beginning.
Limits L1, L2, and L3 represent the concentration in individual gases in ppm. G1
and G2 represents generation rates of individual gases in ppm per month. To
obtain G1 and G2 in ppm per day divide the per month numbers by 30. Except for
acetylene, G1 is 10% of L1 and G2 is 50% of L1. The generation rates (G1, G2),
are points where our level of concern should increase, especially when considered
with the L1, L2, and L3 limits. At G2 generation rate, we should be extremely
concerned and reduce the DGA sampling interval accordingly, and perhaps plan
an outage, etc.
Except for acetylene, generation rate levels G1 and G2 were taken from IEC 60599
reference [12] which is used with mineral oil transformers. Any amount of
ongoing acetylene generation means active arcing inside the
transformer. In this case, the transformer should be removed from
service. These criteria were chosen because of an absence of any other criteria.
As dissolved gas analysis criteria for silicone oils becomes better known and
quantified table 15 will change to reflect new information.
If gas generation rates are fairly constant (no big increases and less than G1
limits above), what do we do if a transformer exceeds the L1 limits? We begin to
pay more attention to that transformer, just as we do with a mineral oil
transformer. We may shorten the DGA sampling interval, reduce loading, check
transformer cooling, get some outside advice, etc. As with mineral oil
transformers, age exerts a big influence in accumulated gas. We should be much
more concerned if a 3-year old transformer which has exceeded the L1 limits than
if a 30-year old transformer exceeds the limits. However, if G1 generation rates
are exceeded in either an old or new transformer, we should step up our level of
concern.
If accumulated gas exceeds the L2 limit, we may plan to have the transformer
degassed. Examine the physical tests in the DGAs and compare them to the
Doble/IEEE table (table 16) (Reference Book on Insulating Liquids and Gasses)
[23]. The oil should be treated in whatever manner is appropriate if these limits
are exceeded.
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If both L1 limits and G1 limits are exceeded, we should become more concerned.
Reduce sampling intervals, get outside advice, reduce loading, check transformer
cooling and oil levels, etc. If G2 generation limits are exceeded, we should
be extremely concerned. It will not be long before L3 limits are exceeded, and
consideration must be given to removing the transformer from service, for testing,
repair, or replacement.
If you have a critical silicone (or mineral oil-filled transformer), such as a single
station service transformer, or excitation transformer, you should find out if a
spare is available at another facility or from Western Area Power Administration
or Bonneville Power. If there are no other possible spares consider beginning the
budget process for getting a spare transformer.
Table 16 lists test limits for service-aged silicone filled transformer oil. If any of
these limits are exceeded, it is suggested that the oil be treated in whatever
manner is appropriate to return the oil to serviceable condition.
Table 16.—Doble and IEEE Physical Test Limits for Service-Aged Silicone Fluid
Note: If only one number appears, both Doble and IEEE have the same limit.
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If the above limits are exceeded in the DGA, the silicone oil should be
filtered, dried or treated to correct the specific problem.
When the transformer is new before energizing and every 3 to 5 years, the
transformer and bushings should be Doble tested. Transformer testing falls into
three broad categories: Factory testing when the transformer is new or has been
refurbished, acceptance testing upon delivery, and field testing for maintenance and
diagnostic purposes. Some tests at the factory are common to most power
transformers, but many of the factory tests are transformer- specific. Table 17 lists
several tests. This test chart has been adapted from IEEE 62-1995 reference [19]. Not
all of the listed tests are done at the factory, and not all of them are done in the field.
Each transformer and each situation is different, requiring its own unique approach
and tests.
Details of how to run specific tests will not be addressed in this FIST. It would be
impractical to repeat how to do Doble testing of a transformer when the information is
readily available in Doble publications. With some exceptions, this is true for most of
the tests. Specific information is readily available within the test instrument
manufacturers literature. Another example is the transformer turns ratio test (TTR);
specific test information is available with the instrument. However, information on
some tests may not be available and will be covered briefly.
4.7.1 Winding Resistances. Winding resistances are tested in the field to check
for loose connections, broken strands, and high contact resistance in tap changers.
Key gases increasing in the DGA will be ethane and/or ethylene and possibly
methane. Results are compared to other phases in wye connected transformers or
between pairs of terminals on a delta-connected winding to determine if a
resistance is too high. Resistances can also be compared to the original factory
measurements. Agreement within 5% for any of the above comparisons is
considered satisfactory. You may have to convert resistance measurements to the
reference temperature used at the factory (usually 75 °C) to compare your
resistance measurements to the factory results. To do this use the following
formula:
Ts + Tk
Rs = Rm
Tm + Tk
Rs = Resistance at the factory reference temperature (found in the transformer
manual)
Rm = Resistance you actually measured
Ts = Factory reference temperature (usually 75 °C)
Tm = Temperature at which you took the measurements
Tk = a constant for the particular metal the winding is made from:
234.5 °C for copper 225 °C for aluminum
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It is very difficult to determine actual winding temperature in the field,
and, normally, this is not needed. You only need to do the above temperature
corrections if you are going to compare resistances to factory values. Normally,
only the phase resistances are compared to each other, and you do not need the
winding temperature to compare individual windings.
You can compare winding resistances to factory values; change in these values can
reveal serious problems. A suggested method to obtain an accurate temperature
is outlined below. If a transformer has just been de-energized for testing, the
winding will be cooler on the bottom than the top, and the winding hot spot will be
hotter than the top oil temperature. What is needed is the average winding
temperature, and it is important to get the temperature as accurate as possible for
comparisons.
The most accurate method is to allow the transformer sit de-energized until
temperatures are equalized. This test can reveal serious problems, so it’s worth
the effort.
Winding resistances are measured using a Wheatstone Bridge for values 1 ohm or
above and using a micro-ohmmeter or Kelvin Bridge for values under 1 ohm.
Multi-Amp (now AVO) makes a good instrument for these measurements which is
quick and easy to use. Take readings from the top of each bushing to neutral for
wye connected windings and across each pair of bushings for delta connected
windings. If the neutral bushing is not available on wye connected windings, you
can take each one to ground (if the neutral is grounded), or take readings between
pairs of bushings as if it were a delta winding. Be consistent each time so that a
proper comparison can be made. The tap changer can also be changed from
contact to contact, and the contact resistance can be checked. Keep accurate
records and connection diagrams so that later measurements can be compared.
4.7.2 Core Insulation Resistance and Inadvertent Core Ground Test. Core
insulation resistance and inadvertent core ground test is used if an additional core
ground is suspected; this may be indicated by the DGA. Key gases to look for are
ethane and/or ethylene and possibly methane. These gases may also be present if
there is a poor connection at the bottom of a bushing or a bad tap changer contact.
Therefore, this test is only necessary if the winding resistance test above shows all
the connections and if tap changer contacts are in good condition.
The intentional core ground must be disconnected. This may be difficult, and
some oil may have to be drained to accomplish this. On some transformers, core
grounds are brought outside through insulated bushings and are easily accessed.
A standard dc megger is then attached between the core ground lead (or the top of
the core itself ) and the tank (ground). The megger is used to place a dc voltage
between these points, and the resistance measured. A new transformer should
read greater than 1,000 megohms. A service-aged transformer should read
greater than 100 megohms. Ten to one-hundred megohms is indicative of
deteriorating insulation between the core and ground. Less than 10 megohms is
77
sufficient to cause destructive circulating currents and must be further
investigated [19]. A solid core ground may read zero ohms; this, of course, causes
destructive circulating currents also.
Some limited success has been obtained in “burning off” unintentional core
grounds using a dc or ac current source. This is a risky operation, and the current
may cause additional damage. The current source is normally limited to 40 to
50 amps maximum and should be increased slowly so as to use as little current as
possible to accomplish the task. This should only be used as a last resort and then
only with consultation from the manufacturer, if possible, and with others
experienced in this task.
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Table 17.—Transformer Test Summary Chart
79
REFERENCES
4. Guidelines for the Life Extension of Substations EPRI, TR-105070. April 1995.
6. Transformer General Gasketing Procedures, by Alan Cote, S.D. Meyers Co. 1987.
10. IEEE Standard C57.19.00, 1991 General Requirements and Test Procedure for
Outdoor Power Apparatus Bushings.
11. IEEE Standard C57.104-1991 Guide for the Interpretation of Gases Generated in Oil-
Immersed Transformers.
12. International Electrotechnical Commission (Draft IEC 60599 Edition 2), Mineral Oil-
Impregnated Electrical Equipment in Service-Interpretation of Dissolved and Free
Gas Analysis. 1997.
13. Dissolved Gas Analysis of Transformer Oil, by John C. Drotos, John W. Porter, Randy
Stebbins, published by the S.D. Meyers Co. 1996.
14. IEEE Standard C57.94, 1982, Recommended Practice for Installation, Application,
Operation and Maintenance of Dry-Type General Purpose Distribution and Power
Transformers.
15. Criteria for the Interpretation of Data for Dissolved Gases in Oil from Transformers
(A Review), by Paul Griffin, Doble Engineering Co. 1996.
17. Thermal Monitors and Loading, by Harold Moore, from Transformer Performance
Monitoring and Diagnostics EPRI. September 1997.
80
18. IEEE and IEC Codes to Interpret Incipient Faults in Transformers, Using Gas in Oil
Analysis, by R.R. Rogers C.E.G.B, Transmission Division, Guilford, England. Circa
1995.
19. IEEE Standard 62-1995, IEEE Guide for Diagnostic Field Testing of Electrical Power
Apparatus, Part 1: Oil Filled Power Transformers, Regulators, and Reactors.
20. FIST 3-5 Maintenance of Liquid Insulation: Mineral Oils and Askarels. 1992.
21. ANSI/ASTM D 971-91, Standard Test Method for Interfacial Tension of Oil Against
Water by the Ring Method.
22. EPRI Substation Equipment Diagnostics Conference VII, Experience with In-Field
Water Contamination of Large Power Transformers, by Victor V. Sokolov and Boris V.
Vanin, Scientific and Engineering Center “ZTZ Service Co.,” Ukraine. 1999
23. Doble Engineering Company “Reference Book on Insulating Liquids and Gases”
RBILG-391. 1993.
24. ANSI/IEEE C57.92-1981, Guide for Loading Mineral Oil Immersed Transformers.
25. Doble Engineering Company Client Conference Minutes 1998 Insulating Fluids
No. 65PAIC98.
26. IEEE P1258, Trial-Use Guide for the Interpretation of Gases Generated in Silicone-
Immersed Transformers. 1999.
28. ASTM D-3487-88, Standard Specification for Mineral Insulating Oil Used in
Electrical Apparatus.
29. ASTM D-5837-96, Standard Test Method for Furanic Compounds in Electrical
Insulating Liquids by High Performance Liquid Chromatography.
30. ASTM F-36-99, Standard Test Method for Compressibility and Recovery of Gasket
Materials.
31. ASTM D-2240-97, Standard Test Method for Rubber Property – Durometer Hardness.
81