DanIBEW481
Member
- Location
- Indiana
- Occupation
- Inside Wireman
I have a production line that I am troubleshooting and thought I would ask the forums their opinion. The line is a tempering furnace with three 460v to 24v transformers which in turn feed heater elements. I got a call on Sunday that one of the transformers went bad. I've checked the resistance across the phase windings on the primary and the secondary, confirmed a lack of shorts from the primary to the secondary, and megged the primary to secondary as well. I have found no issues on the transformer itself.
There is a section of tinned copper bus that connects to a larger aluminum bus that the elements are landed on. On b-phase, the aluminum is completely shot; the metal is powdery and soft. I can actually split it apart with a screwdriver. Separating these two parts, there is a large amount of oxidation and deep pitting on the aluminum and exposed copper on the other. C-phase is similar but the aluminum is not as far gone. I still believe this copper was tinned at one point but what could have caused a failure of this magnitude? The breaker for the transformer never tripped and supposedly everything had still been working until that point.
There is a section of tinned copper bus that connects to a larger aluminum bus that the elements are landed on. On b-phase, the aluminum is completely shot; the metal is powdery and soft. I can actually split it apart with a screwdriver. Separating these two parts, there is a large amount of oxidation and deep pitting on the aluminum and exposed copper on the other. C-phase is similar but the aluminum is not as far gone. I still believe this copper was tinned at one point but what could have caused a failure of this magnitude? The breaker for the transformer never tripped and supposedly everything had still been working until that point.




