Abb GCB
Abb GCB
Abb GCB
Please contact the GCB Training Team for more information as given: GCB_Training@ch.abb.com
This training documentation is an extract of the corresponding product “Operating manual”. The “Operating
manual”, given to you with the product, overrides the instructions in this document.
© ABB Group ABB reserves all rights in this document and in the information contained therein. Reproduction, use or disclosure to third parties without
June 20, 2011 | Slide 4 express authority are strictly forbidden. Subject to technical modifications without notice.
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 5
HECS-130XXLp
Cover
SF6 Density indicator
& fill connection
(on pole frame)
Enclosure
Operating mechanisms
- Hydraulic spring drive HMB-4
Pole frame
- Slow drives
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 7
Product description & design
Operating mechanisms
Q82 Q91
Q81
Q0
Q9
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 8
Product description & design
Components inside the enclosure
Surge arrester
Current transformer
Voltage transformer
Disconnector
Arcing chamber
Capacitor
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 9
Product description & design
Components filled with SF6-Gas
Circuit breaker
Gas pipe
Density monitor
Density indicator
Both, the pole frame and the control cubicle must be earthed separately.
Correct earthing of the product:
Only one (1) earthing point of the control cubicle must be connected to protective earthing.
Only one (1) earthing point of the pole frame must be connected to protective earthing.
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 11
HECS-130XXLp
Event counters
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 13
Operation mode, controls & alarms
Mimic diagram of the control cubicle (standard execution)
LOCAL operating
mode pushbuttons
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 15
Operation mode, controls & alarms
Gas equipment
■ green zone (dot point): nominal SF6 pressure (620 kPa abs.@20°C)
Density of the SF6 gas is correctly displayed if there are no temperature differences
between interrupting chamber and density indicator
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 16
Operation mode, controls & alarms
Hydraulic springs operating mechanism
Which alarm(s) you could get from the Hydraulic spring drive ?
Remark: supervision relays circuits are optional
Blocking Close : The circuit-breaker can only perform only one opening operation.
Blocking C & O : The circuit-breaker can not perform any operation (incl.protection trip II)
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 17
Operation mode, controls & alarms
SDM drives (protections)
Which alarm(s) you could get from the SDM drives (protections) ?
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 18
Operation mode, controls & alarms
Control cubicle
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 19
Operation mode, controls & alarms
Interruption and grounding (generator side)
Interruption
1. Open Q0
2. Open Q9
4. Close Q81
G
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 20
Operation mode, controls & alarms
Work on GCB system
Q81 Q82
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 21
Operation mode, controls & alarms
SDM control panel
Normal operation
- Access key: removed
- locking key for OFF position: inserted
- locking key for ON position: inserted
- switching position: ON or OFF
- hand-crank: looked
- knob: motorised operation
Q9 Disconnector Q0 Circuit-Breaker
Q82 Earthing switch T.side Q81 Earthing switch G.side
Q91 Starting switch
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 25
Customer control & protection
Circuit-breaker protection, Close operation
S2 in position REMOTE
Q9 Close
Q81 OPEN
Q82 OPEN &
Q91 OPEN (and)
Remote signal CLOSE
Q0 OPEN
Q0
>1 &
(or) (and) CLOSE
Hydraulic spring drive O.K.
(Blocking close not set)
S2 in position LOCAL
Q9 Open SF6 Pressure O.K.
Ext. Interlocking FREE & (SF6 Gas-blocking not set)
Push button SH11 (and)
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 26
Customer control & protection
Circuit-breaker protection, Open operation TRIP I
S2 in position REMOTE
&
Remote signal OPEN
(and)
Q0 CLOSE
Q0
>1 &
(or) (and) OPEN
Hydraulic spring drive O.K.
(Blocking open not set)
S2 in position LOCAL
&
Push button SF6 Pressure O.K.
(and)
(SF6 Gas-blocking not set)
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 27
Customer control & protection
Circuit-breaker protection, Open operation TRIP II
S2 in position REMOTE*
Remote signal OPEN &
(Protection trip) (and)
Q0 CLOSE
Q0
>1 &
(or) (and) OPEN
Hydraulic spring drive O.K.
(BLOCKING-O not set)
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 28
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 29
GCB Customer Training (light version after Commissioning)
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 31
Components & function
Mechanical interlocking
The Close-position interlock, which in installed as an option, serves as protection of the circuit
breaker in on-position in case of a complete pressure loss by a defective drive.
© ABB Group Please pay attention during hand operation with the emergency lever.
June 20, 2011 | Slide 32
Components & function
Preventive maintenance (O&M HMB4 Drive, chapter 4.3)
Extended checks
It can be combined and executed during functional checks of the GCB System
- Oil level
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 33 manipulation by trained personnel only
GCB Customer Training (light version after Commissioning)
SF6 Gas
Handling & Safety instruction
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 34
SF6 Gas
Characteristic
Colourless
Odourless
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 35
SF6 Gas
Declaring
Professional handling starts with correct declaring of the used bottles and container
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 36
SF6 Gas
Contamination
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 37
SF6 Gas
Couplings
DILO-couplings are manufactured with nominal diameters DN 6, 7, 8, 12 and 20
Coupling coupled
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 38
SF6 Gas
Gas re-filling device
Case dimensions:
LxWxH: 475x380x125mm
Weight: 7,5kg
(3) (4) (1) (5) (2)
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 39
SF6 Gas
Re-filling during operation
3 1
ON
8 Due to cool down effect of
expanding gases the re-filling
process has to be done slowly till
the alarm “SF6 low density”
disappears.
6
4
2
5
7
1
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 41
Avoid SF6 losses, leave SF6 inside the tube hose
SF6 Gas
Information
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 42
SF6 Gas
EU standard
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 43
HECS-130L
Maintenance Concept
Periodic checks
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 44
Maintenance concept
Policy, principles, targets & benefits
Targets
Retain or restore the product in its safe and functional condition
Ensure the availability of the wear and tear parts for the life
time of the breaker (or beyond it) and the relevant service
knowledge
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 45
Maintenance concept
Maintenance Plan
Overhaul
(Preventive maintenance)
Exchange parts
Reconditioning
Repair
(Corrective maintenance)
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 46
Maintenance concept
Service criteria
- Abrasion moving parts (slide bearing) - Aging (seals, isolators, guide ways)
Cumulated current
- Burn off of contacts
- SF6 decomposition products
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 47
Maintenance concept
Service criteria HECS
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 48
Maintenance concept
Periodic checks, supervisory tasks
Interval 1 day to …. interval (depends on operation)
Group Operator (s)
Unit in operation
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 49
Maintenance concept
Calculation of ablation coefficient k (Example with HECS-80S)
with k =
-1 if 0 kA rms ≤ I < 0.847 kA rms
- f (I)* if 0.847 kA rms ≤ I ≤ 150 % IC*
- 5000 if 150 % IC < I over-current
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 50
Every breaker has his own k factor table !
Maintenance concept
Measuring of the switched current
1 - Continuous current
2 - Interval for measuring
3 - Trip signal
4 - Contact separation
5 - Current interruption
Time
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 51
Maintenance concept
Logbooks
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 52
Maintenance concept
Periodic checks, routine checks
Interval 1 month to 1 year (depends on operation)
Group Operator (s)
Unit in operation
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 53
Maintenance concept
Periodic checks, functional checks
Interval 1 year
Group Operator (s)
Unit - Out of operation
- Generator, Transformer and SFC are disconnected / earthed
- IPB earthed
- Enclosure of product remains closed
Verification measurement
Travel measurement vs. time
The result of a travel measurement vs. time is to verify the mechanical performance of the product.
The travel measurement vs. time is recommended for rarely switching products and after storage
periods of more than 12 months.
Extended warranty
© ABB Group
Monitoring system
June 20, 2011 | Slide 55
Maintenance concept
Dynamic Resistance Measurement
Why is it important? - At an Overhaul you might see that the arcing contact has tracks of erosion.
- The arc contact is shorter and the nozzle is wider than at new condition.
- We know, that if the erosion is too high, the breaker will fail at interruption of
current.
we want to know the length (condition) of the arcing contact without opening
the breaker to predict the remaining life time.
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 56
Maintenance concept
Dynamic Resistance Measurement
What is it? The Dynamic Resistance Measurement permits to define the overlap time
between nominal-contact- and arcing-contact system.
Commutation
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 57
Maintenance concept
Dynamic Resistance Measurement
Contact the manufacturer early enough to synchronize service and/or overhaul of the
product with the maintenance activities in the respective unit of the plant
Our advisory services and information will help you to accomplish a smooth and rapid
overhaul
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 59
GCB Customer Training (light version after Commissioning)
HECS
Identification & Documentations
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 60
Identification and documentation
Troubleshooting
The local hotline number you can easily find next to the rating plate of each breaker
- inside of the local control cubicle
- at pole frame
E-mail: GCB_service@ch.abb.com
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 61
Identification and documentation
Documentation
General documents
- O&M Manual
Type and Components
- Erection manual
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 62
Identification and documentation
Rating plate information for identification (on pole frame)
Serial number
GCB Type
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 63
Identification and documentation
Electrical scheme information for identification
Plant name
GCB Type
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 64
© ABB Group
June 20, 2011 | Slide 65