Abstract

Hydro-Quebec's experience with polymer insulators began in 1977. A sixteen km section of a 735 kV transmission line near Quebec City was then re-insulated with 282 composite insulators of three different makes in equal proportions. The objective was to study them under real service conditions in order to evaluate their performance and to assess the relative merits of each make. This experimentation was later extended to some other lines and/or voltage levels and has continued up to now. During all these years, various methods of testing composite insulators in-service have been experimented with and early in the 1990s, the first device developed at IREQ for the in-situ testing of porcelain insulators by the electric field method was modified and adapted for use on composite suspension insulators. This paper presents a few cases of insulators having a particularly dangerous type of failure mode and found on the lines by the use of the electric field method. Some background information on the detection of defects by this method is also given and some of the experiments done in the laboratory on composite insulators to define the limits of the method are described.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call