byrdj
Mechanical
- May 21, 2003
- 1,663
After hearing about the accident at Eskom’s Duvha power station, there were other related articles (from googling) that seem to imply a load rejection test was something performed routinely (annually?).
Distinguishing between an actual over speed trip test, where the turbine speed is brought up under control of the governor, past the high speed stop override, till the emergency governor trips; A load rejection test being opening the breaker while the generator is at load and allowing the mechanical torque of the turbine to rapidly accelerate the turbine, usually at 10% per second. Thus testing the governor's response to see if it can control the over speed during this 1 second before the emergency governor setting.
The load rejection test I assisted with were planned and performed under the strictest conditions and fully instrumented. Prior to testing all the components were tested just prior and only key personnel allowed on site.
These were part of commissioning testing and required by contract. Recently, I have assisted with minimum load rejection testing they were performing to determine moment of inertia for system modeling, but they were also a onetime event and not a routine test.
So my question, does anyone perform load rejection test routinely and if so, how seriously are they monitored?
Distinguishing between an actual over speed trip test, where the turbine speed is brought up under control of the governor, past the high speed stop override, till the emergency governor trips; A load rejection test being opening the breaker while the generator is at load and allowing the mechanical torque of the turbine to rapidly accelerate the turbine, usually at 10% per second. Thus testing the governor's response to see if it can control the over speed during this 1 second before the emergency governor setting.
The load rejection test I assisted with were planned and performed under the strictest conditions and fully instrumented. Prior to testing all the components were tested just prior and only key personnel allowed on site.
These were part of commissioning testing and required by contract. Recently, I have assisted with minimum load rejection testing they were performing to determine moment of inertia for system modeling, but they were also a onetime event and not a routine test.
So my question, does anyone perform load rejection test routinely and if so, how seriously are they monitored?