Turbine Alignment
Turbine Alignment
Turbine alignment:
Time is money
Ludeca Incs Dieter Seidenthal was
talking about laser alignment of
steam-turbine internalsas he often
doeswhen the editors of the COMBINED CYCLE Journal bumped
into him at Power-Gen International
late last year. The subject that day
was that after more than 10 years
of successful experience in powerplants with laser bore alignment,
there were still turbine users relying
on piano wire and dummy shafts.
Seidenthal had no problem reciting
the reasons why this is so: no personnel trained for the task, people are
comfortable with piano wire because
theyve done it before, and, of course,
instrumentation costs money.
First some background. A
well-known fact is that bore alignment of bearing pockets, seals, and
diaphragms can be time-consuming
tasks in the overhaul of turbines
something most combined-cycle
plants have several ofif you rely on
piano wire, micrometers, and optical instruments. Thats why turbine
manufacturers and specialty service
companies have embraced systems
such as Centralign, a registered
trademark of Germanys Prueftechnik AG, distributed exclusively in the
US by Miami-based Ludeca.
Centralign uses a visible-laser
emitter and intelligent sensor to
determine the centerline position
of bearing pockets with micron
accuracy, even over separations of
more than 100 ft. All readings are
transmitted via cordless infrared
link to a computer which automatically plots an alignment diagram of
all measurement points, along with
their offsets from the laser reference
line. The reference can be shifted to
any desired position in the display
so that the offsets are recalculated
automatically; the laser eliminates
the oft-troublesome pre-leveling and
sag compensation.
Seidenthal (305-591-8935,
dieter@ludeca.com) says the costof-instrumentation and no-qualified-personnel arguments rarely are
validif ever. By way of example,
he points to recent experience at
a Pacific Rim utility on a 450-MW
steam turbine. The company had
never before attempted to implement
internals alignment with a laser. As
Balloon keeps
HRSG warm
Balloon?
A problem faced by engineers
today is that their combined-cycle
plants are not operating base-load
as owners thought they would be
when designed. Thus auxiliaries and
extras that would have facilitated
cycling service and simplified periodic shutdowns lasting for days (sometimes as long as several weeks) were
not considered. No need; so owners
thought.
One such extra is a stack damper.
It can prevent rapid cool-down of
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