ID |
Date |
Author |
Operational Mode |
Subject |
259
|
Fri Sep 26 09:44:25 2008 |
Doug Preddy | Maintenance | Water flow interlock restored |
yesterday |
225
|
Fri Oct 5 10:25:43 2007 |
Doug Preddy | Quench Recovery | Unknown quench 2 |
Kevin and I were at the Sulzer panel when the system quenched 2. No
obvious reasons. Restarted the system. |
101
|
Thu Jun 9 21:41:25 2005 |
Willy Andersson | Quench Recovery | Trying to achieve stable cooling. |
From about 08:00 to 15:00
See Doug's previous entry for quench recovery details.
First the system had been set to // cold return mode because the solenoid
temps seemed low enough. Temps started to rise instead of cooling so system
was eventually set back to // warm return mode. With the system in // warm
return mode the solenoid was still warming instead of cooling. Solenoid
temps were rising to almost 50K and T1 shield heater was about 90%. T1
inlet temp was below 75K and falling even with shield heat set so high.
CV155 kept closed and // warm return flows were full flow. T1 brake valve
seemed way too open at about 0.8 (compared to previous runs).
15:00 to 19:00
Tried opening CV155, didn't seem to help much. Temps still trending
upwards. Decided to reduce flow to solenoid to see if the cold box would
cool down. Started reducing the // warm return outlet valves. TI121 began
to drop slowly. On graph plotting solenoid temps they started to trend
downwards. Weird. A reduced flow seemed to produce more cooling ? Don't
understand this but will continue. Flow temps returning from solenoid were
about the same temp as TI121, about 35 K. Switching to // cold return mode
to try to reduce TI121. Keeping CV155 as open as possible, just keeping
CV204 from closing completely. After switching to // cold return TI121
starts to slowly fall, T1 inlet temp rises over time so start to drop
shield heater setting. Solenoid temps now trending downwards. Cracked open
CV142 to get some flow going through powerleads. Raised compressor
discharge press to about 11.2 barA. Shield heater down over time to about
10%. Reduced CV155 down to the point where temps almost stop falling then
open cv155 just enogh to keep temps falling.
19:30 Solenoid temps down to about 28K. Letting system continue cooling
overnight.
Guessing the cause of the turbine overspeed quench was caused by
contamination entering the spinning turbine, causing rapid speed changes or
possibly the continued saga of the water damaged Jaquet turbine speed
tachometer giving random false trips. |
14
|
Sun Apr 25 21:41:00 2004 |
Willy Andersson | Quench Recovery | Trip on PL Temp. |
Got pager call at 16:20 this afternoon. Solenoid had tripped on PL
temperature. Arrived at about 17:00. Did a print screen of the striptool
graph and solenoid screen. See files Prtscrn1_april25_2004.doc and
Prtscrn2_april25_2004.doc. System was in idle running mode. LHE heater at
about 30%, buffer tank press at21.5 psig, shield heater at 37.5%. The
jumper is still on the back of the vacuum guage PIC901. The compressor
building backup air compressor was tripped again, I reset it. HIC 141 was
set to 0.46 , I set it to 1.1 (closed position). Set solenoid inlet and
outlet HIC's to valve closed positions. Energized warm return HIC's then
slowly opened warm return valves to vent pressure in solenoid. Cracked open
solenoid inlet valves to get abot 1.5 barA pressure on PI143 and PI146. LHe
level started to drop. Contiued slowly until all LHe boiled away. PI143 and
PI146 at about 5 barA. Had to adjust turbine speeds and shield heat. Opened
cold returns then closed warm returns. Gradually increased solenoid inlet
valves until wide open. Adjust turbine speeds and shiled heater. At about
21:00 stable // cold return cooling. Temperatures dropping gradually. See
files april25_2004_2113.BMP and april25_2004_2114.BMP
Have powerlead supply valve HIC142 open to 0.46 during cooling just to see
what happens. Time now about 21:42. Leaving system in // cold return
cooling. Should be ready for series switch over in the morning. |
99
|
Thu Jun 9 06:53:40 2005 |
Experimentor | Other | Trip at 6:45 Today. |
Solenoid quenched at 6:45. All temperature monitors were flat until trip.
Hearing compressor stop was first warning. Lights are:
Turbine T1 overspeed, Compresor alarm, cryostat quench.
--Donald Arseneau |
204
|
Tue Jun 19 21:15:41 2007 |
Doug Preddy | Quench Recovery | Today's quench |
power lead temps caused a quench at 8:30 this morning. Recovery of system
and flow to solenoid was started by 11:00. Solenoid was switched to series
cold at 3:00. Solenoid and power leads were cold at ~6:30. power supply
was to be energized by experimenters. |
2
|
Fri Dec 19 13:07:25 2003 |
Willy Andersson | Maintenance | To-Do list for M9SOL |
I had distributed this list by email earlier this month. I have added
a few items at the bottom. I am posting it on the M9SOL Elog under
Maintenance. Some of the items may not be achievable or practical but
I thought it would be a useful first attempt at a To-Do list. |
Attachment 1: M9Blist3.txt
|
To-do and To-consider items for M9B superconducting
solenoid/refrigeration system.
- New pressure guages for the Mycom compressor panel. The
present guages are damaged from vibration and do not read
properly. The new guages should be isolated somehow from
vibration.
- Investigate designing and building a compressor oil
heater/conditioner. The helium compressor should be topped up
with "conditioned" oil.
- Have contractor check allignment of compressor motor to
compressor and check flex coupling condition. MYCOM to
recommend contractor. Check condition of and re-grease
compressor motor bearings.
- Replace missing and unreadable identification tags on
valves, piping, and instrumentation throughout the system.
- Identify, catalog and label stored spare parts and equipment
and provide proper storage.
- Provide "Lamp Check" button for main compressor panel.
- Investigate LED type replacement bulbs ( Base Style 24XX )
for Sulzer control panel.
- Update and improve operation manual and maintenance instructions.
- Provide computer control for solenoid power supply to
simplify operation and make it less prone to operator
error.
- Re-arrange locations of vacuum computer and X displays so
that the opportunity of accidently bumping into buttons on Sulzer
panel is reduced.
- Re-write solenoid power supply logic to require that both powerlead
temperatures must be stable and below XX? Kelvin for 60 minutes before
enabling arming the solenoid power supply.
- Increase computer security. Restrict physical access ?
Virus scanner ?
- Look into using Ultra-VNC with encryption for security. Stop
Commute modem access but route Commute access through hard wired
serial connection to PC running Ultra-VNC. Or keep modem access
but use call back method.
- Set up procedure and pipe in convenient sample points for
dewpoint, N2/O2, oil content readings. Sample readings should be
documented prior to starting turbine cooling.
- Upgrade LN2 fill equipment for Purifiers. Can both puifiers
be operated in parallel during a cool down ? Auto-isolation of
purifiers' from helium system when LN2 runs out or fails or
power failure.
- Provide dedicated LN2 line to M9B compressor building ? Guy Stanford
has info on relatively inexpensive efficient foam covering for LN2
lines instead of vacuum jacketed piping.
- Can anything be done about the epoxy fumes from the buffer tank ?
A charcoal/molecular seive filter in the buffer tank line
check-valved for free flow to buffer but filtered flow from buffer ?
- Fix back-up air compressor system.
- Remove any unauthorized taps off of the M9B compressed air line to
other non M9B systems.
- Clean-up of compressor building and clean-up around Sulzer panel.
- Route turbine defrost circuits to outside of shielding blocks.
- Clean-up area behind solenoid power lead flowmeters and pressure
gauge panel. Remove all unused tubing and cables.
- Harden Sulzer control panel against water damage from water leaks
overhead.
- pipe in precision flow control valve and pressure guages on powerlead
flow to main compressor suction line.
- pipe in manual bypass circuit around main coldbox HE in and out
valves.
- New vacuum controller for Sulzer panel. Repair old one for a spare.
- Add in some smart logic to prevent system trip on solenoid vacuum
during a quench recovery cooldown. When solenoid power supply is
not armed solenoid vacuum should be allowed to degrade slightly
( within limits ) from contamination defrosting into solenoid vacuum.
As soon as solenoid power supply is armed then solenoid vacuum trip
set to high vacuum again. Solenoid vacuum trip logic should be re-worked.
- provide vacuum gauge between solenoid vacuum diffpump and BV2.
- provide computer readable indication for:
- CV204 position
- LHe heater reading
- turbine 1 entrance temp.
- Buffer tank line pressure
- air pressure
- position signal to CV211 and CV212
- position of CV151
- position of CV141
- 80K shield heater setting
- purifier LN2 status
- backup air compressor OK
- solenoid vacuum
- solenoid current
- solenoid power supply armed ?
- others ?????
- check oil levels, drive belts etc for system mechanical, diff, and
cryo pumps.
- check calibration of system pressure and temperature sensors.
- repairs and upgrades to Sulzer Control panel instrumentation and
relays
- re-charge TI148 and TI149
- follow-up on improvement requests for X displays for vacuum and solenoid
data.
- compressor water package maintenance and repairs.
- repair compressor building roof leak.
- inspect and clean system air filters and coalesers and water filters.
- buffer tank clean-up and re-paint.
- train more system operators for M9B and ISAC II helium refrigeration
systems ?
- Vacuum gauges on cold box transfer lines ? Or build small portable LN2
trapped vacuum pump station ( probably very usefull for many other
areas at TRIUMF including purifier regeneration in compressor building )
- Should we buy Don Dales' first trip logger ? It is a PLC that is networkable
and may be used for other functions ? Is it obsolete or outdated ?
- Develope a system using a residual gas analyzer for helium gas purity
measurements ?
_____________________________________________________________________________
Items added Dec 19,2003 :
- Sniffer Leak check of piping, especially powerlead insulators.
- Top up gas to system. The lowest helium relief valve setting is
SV45 set at 5 kg/cm^2 Gauge (71.12 psig) so it would be reasonable
to fill the system to 60 psig.
- re-work purifier plumbing, add purge ports at flowmeter. Make
purifiers portable ?
- Make small portable circulation helium compressor + ORS skid ?
- Schedule quarterly steady state vibration measurments for MYCOM
compressor. (Tom Ries has vibration measurement equipment)
_______________________________________________________End of list for now !
|
3
|
Fri Dec 19 13:59:53 2003 |
Doug Preddy | Maintenance | To-Do list for M9SOL |
> I had distributed this list by email earlier this month. I have added
> a few items at the bottom. I am posting it on the M9SOL Elog under
> Maintenance. Some of the items may not be achievable or practical but
> I thought it would be a useful first attempt at a To-Do list.
A couple of other things to add:
Rebuild cooling water circulation pump with new seals and bearings.
Add air bleeds to the copper nonactive water lines.
Doug |
43
|
Tue Aug 24 12:09:50 2004 |
Doug Preddy | Normal Running | The past few days |
The solenoid has been re-started as of August 19. It was cooled down and
energized over the weekend. Sunday night at 9:30 it tripped due to
negative power lead going above it's set point. The system stopped flow to
the solenoid, but kept the compressor and cold box running. While starting
flow to the solenoid, we got a high pressure trip. I came in and restarted
the compressor, after Curtis located and reset the over pressure
interlock. The solenoid is cold and energized as of 3:30 pm yesterday. It
is still stable as of now. |
192
|
Fri Apr 27 10:16:44 2007 |
Kevin Trithardt | Quench Recovery | Test |
Don't Panic -- There was no quench. I am testing the e-log.
I have added Kevin's name and e-mail to the M9 e-log. He will be e-mailed
when a quench recovery log is submitted. His name is also included in the
Author's list.
Thanks, Doug |
126
|
Tue Jun 13 16:04:33 2006 |
Willy Andersson | Quench Recovery | TIC 121 set to auto mode |
|
137
|
Thu Jul 20 02:59:06 2006 |
Doug Preddy | Quench Recovery | T1 still not starting |
I will leave the cold box to warm overnight and try it again in the morning. |
138
|
Thu Jul 20 08:18:31 2006 |
Doug Preddy | Quench Recovery | T1 started |
Started flow to turbines. Both started. T1 seems a bit slow. HIC110 at 0.85
SI110 = 4100.
Cool down started. |
136
|
Thu Jul 20 00:52:13 2006 |
Doug Preddy | Quench Recovery | T1 frozen |
T1 will not spin up. Warming up cold box. |
11
|
Wed Apr 21 09:57:59 2004 |
Willy Andersson | Start Up | System status |
Buffer tank pressure is down to about 6 psig. Too low to keep up
with liquefaction requirements to build LHe level. Doug Preddy
requested that I help Curtis Ballard top up system with new
bottle of UHP helium Through purifier. As of 09:45 not yet able
to find Curtis.
PI229 discharge pressure dropped slightly to 10.45 barA. Set point
is 11 barA. Turbine speeds OK. CV211 is wide open. Energized HIC142
and set to 0.7 to start flow to powerleads. Up in compressor room
checked purifier. LN2 system running OK. In purifier package flowmeter
looks like oil or brownish spots on inside of rotameter glass. Possible
migration of trapped contaminants after correcting flow arrangement
through purifier. Initially buffer tank circulation flow entered
through AV3 but was corrected to enter through AV5.
Have 10:00 meeting, system seems stable and should be OK until I can
contact Curtis to top up system with UHP helium through purifier. |
109
|
Sun Aug 14 10:03:13 2005 |
Willy Andersson | Normal Running | System stable |
No experiment running in M9B.
Solenoid current is zero and power supply not armed.
System in stable series cooling mode. |
234
|
Fri Nov 9 18:56:20 2007 |
Doug Preddy | Maintenance | System Ready to Run |
M9BMP2 was replaced. Vacuum good. Solenoid is ramped up. :) |
154
|
Wed Aug 9 07:50:49 2006 |
Doug Preddy | Quench Recovery | Switched to series mode. |
Cool down continues. |
166
|
Thu Oct 5 14:53:54 2006 |
Doug Preddy | Start Up | Switched to series mode |
|
200
|
Thu May 31 11:51:49 2007 |
Doug Preddy | Quench Recovery | Switched to series mode |
|