Yuma
Electrical
- Jul 2, 2006
- 71
Dear all,
We are in the process of repairing the core of a salient pole generator. This core has a bad hot spot that shorts some of the laminations. The shop offers two alternatives to do the repair:
option 1 - reuse the same core laminations, just relocating them in order to distribute the damaged plates all over the core and thus turn the hot spot into many little hot spots that hopefully will be negligible.
option 2 - build new laminations, dismantle the core until we reach the damaged zone, and replace the damaged zone.
I have never seen the case of option 1 myself, but I recall having heard of it. Does anybody have any experience of such a repair, and in that case, are you satisfied with the result?
As for option 2, the shop tells us that we could replace not only the damaged zone but all the dismantled zone - maybe half of the core- or even the full core with new laminations. Replacing the full core sounds like the best option technically, but my question is, given that the new laminations have 1 W/kg losses and the old laminations have 2 W/kg, do you think that, if we finally replace part of the core, we may have some issues like thermal or magnetical flux imbalance or whatever?
We are in the process of repairing the core of a salient pole generator. This core has a bad hot spot that shorts some of the laminations. The shop offers two alternatives to do the repair:
option 1 - reuse the same core laminations, just relocating them in order to distribute the damaged plates all over the core and thus turn the hot spot into many little hot spots that hopefully will be negligible.
option 2 - build new laminations, dismantle the core until we reach the damaged zone, and replace the damaged zone.
I have never seen the case of option 1 myself, but I recall having heard of it. Does anybody have any experience of such a repair, and in that case, are you satisfied with the result?
As for option 2, the shop tells us that we could replace not only the damaged zone but all the dismantled zone - maybe half of the core- or even the full core with new laminations. Replacing the full core sounds like the best option technically, but my question is, given that the new laminations have 1 W/kg losses and the old laminations have 2 W/kg, do you think that, if we finally replace part of the core, we may have some issues like thermal or magnetical flux imbalance or whatever?