sokkerdude said:
Is there a written standard accept procedure for megging wire ? And what is acceptable reading for THHN?
I have a owner rep that is pissed off at my electrician on the job. He is wanting every wire megged. Which is not a problem, but he want accept our procedure. He is wanting to fill the conduits with water and meg the each wire for 2 minutes. Thank you
Don,
There seems to be more going on than meets the eye here.
1) Writtten standard for Meggering? Should have been part of the contract if this deemed reasonable and prudent (time needs to be alotted in the bid). If neccesary to turn in a submittal, I'd contact the manufacture to receive faxxed written procedures. Option two would be to see if NEIS has a written standard. IEEE or American petroleum Institue may have specifications too.
"I have a owner rep that is pissed off at my electrician on the job. He is wanting every wire megged"
What brought this on?
2)Have to be pretty rough with the wire to bring this kind of wrath I would think. I've never heard of intentionally filling the pipe (THHN is for dry and damp locations. Unless dual rated as THHN/THWN , but it's still only commercial wire in comparison to other selections available). Yes I'm fully aware that all underground fills up, especially being from Alaska originally.
3) I fail to see where two minutes is going to do a whole lot. This is not a high-pot cook out at 60K for two hours. Meggering at 1000V, on 600v conductors, for one minute is going to load up, then possibly cook out to 2 gigaohms on a low humidity day. Rain, for or high humidity days, make for poor readings of less than 1 gigaohm, 50 mega-ohms is the least acceptable reading (documentation trail) that the client is willing to accept.
I'd hate to tell you how we used to clear low meg readings (2 - 5 megs) back in the 70's onboard military ship (s) and we had an FP&E switchboard!
I have a lot of oil patch time in Alaska, and we megger everything on Alyeska contracts for pipeline work. most spaces are classified area(s). The standard call for wire is XHHW-2, for conductors in pipe, and sometimes in cabletray - flat or tri-pled up by hand. Last few years the industry has moved to HLMC and cable tray for efficiency, and cost savings.