Monitoring turns overloading into optimised use
Better control with continuous real-time monitoring
In today’s deregulated transmission market, many operators have little choice but to overload their transformers. Continuous real-time monitoring enables them to control overloads without overheating and ageing their transformer insulations.
“Overloading” is by definition undesirable. Its excessive heat over time ages transformers’ solid insulation. The paper in the insulation becomes brittle and unable to cope with any of the normal electrical and mechanical wear and tear that is part of the daily grind within a transformer. The ageing process of even thermally upgraded paper, designed to withstand a top-rated temperature of 110°C with normal ageing, doubles for every 7 K rise in temperature. Insulation cannot be repaired. The end of its life spells the end of the life for the transformer.
-
[5]
However, overloading is also necessary and the transformers designed in accordance with international standards can also be overloaded as indicated in loading guides such as the IEC 60076-7. Nevertheless, loads greater than the nameplate rating involve a degree of risk and accelerated ageing, as the IEC loading guide points out. The guide states that long-term overloads age the solid insulation, short-lived overloads impair its dielectric strength, and overloading generally can raise the temperatures of parts like bushing connections so high that it causes thermal runaway. -
[6]