ID |
Date |
Author |
Category |
Type |
Module |
Target/Number |
Subject |
542
|
Wednesday, November 13, 2013, 10:01 |
David Wang | Conditioning Station | Repair | TM2 | | TM2 leak check at conditioning station |
I leak checked TM2 at conditioning station this morning. All air to vacuum seals on the top of the module are good. All water lines are pressured with 60 psi helium for minutes each. One of the tube heater + water line( 2lines for tube heater + for supply and return) has a huge response on 60 psi helium pressurizing. The leak rate went from 6.0xE-9atm.cc/sec to maximum leak rate in 5 seconds and I saw a pressure increasing either. when I pressurize the other side tube heater + line ,the leak detector also had a response,but it is slower than first side .Since the top of the water adaptor isn't sealed , so I think the leak should be in one line only. All other water lines are leak tight since I didnt see any obvious response on leak detector at 5 to 6x E-9 atm.cc/sec which is very low on leak rate. |
544
|
Friday, November 15, 2013, 16:48 |
Bevan Moss | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | TM2 | | HV Testing |
High voltage testing was started on TM2 with no source tray today. The maximum stable for 1 minute voltage reached was 47.5kV but the module is still conditioning. With every step up in voltage the current goes up a large amount and slowly bleeds down. Large sparks disrupts the connection of the CANBUS to the PS which is irritating but the module can be brought up to the equivalent voltage in less than 30 seconds. Attached is a screen shot of most of the strip tool. I have also attached all of the dumped data. The module will be left under vacuum with the water running over the weekend and HV testing will continue on Monday. |
545
|
Monday, November 18, 2013, 11:54 |
Bevan Moss | Conditioning Station | Repair | TM2 | | Fault on TCS Chill |
This morning when I went to start HV conditioning CP2 and CP3 both had faults and the temperature of the water was ~27C. I reset the compressors by flipping the system reset switch. This cleared the fault and allowed the compressors to come one. To the best of my knowledge these faults happen as a result of compressor fluid pressure too low or high and temperature too low or high and lack of flow. The system cannot determine which one it was that caused the trip. The system restarted and faulted again. As I was watching this time it can be determined that the fault was the result of an over temperature event. This was the caused by the cooling fans not coming on. Which was traced to the fan VFD controllers which both read OP3 which is an Over voltage during constant speed operation. The operating manual lists these as the possible causes
The input voltage is fluctuating abnormally.
• Power network is greater than 200 kVA
• Power factor capacitor switching
• SCR switching on power network
• The drive controller is regenerating— the load causes the motor to run at a frequency higher than drive controller output frequency.
• Intermittent output phase fault
The proposed solutions are
• Install a line reactor.
• Check the input and output circuits for phase failure and rectify.
I will continue to monitor over the next few days to see if this continues to happen. If it does I will contact ESC. |
546
|
Monday, November 18, 2013, 16:42 |
Bevan Moss | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | TM2 | | HV Testing |
The Glory of TM2 continues 100V at a time. Today I brought the module to 46kV and left it there for 1 hour. During this time there was only 1 spark. I then continues at up to 53kV. At this voltage the canbus continues to be temperamental when the module sparks. The module is still conditioning and I will continue more tomorrow. Attached is the dumped data and a screen shot of the conditioning from 46kV to 53kV. |
547
|
Monday, November 18, 2013, 16:44 |
Bevan Moss | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | | | Testing of cooling package |
I have tested all of the compressors for TCS. All are operational and cycled as they should. |
550
|
Tuesday, November 19, 2013, 16:55 |
Bevan Moss | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | TM2 | | HV conditioning |
HV conditioning of TM2 continued today. At ~53.5kV the module started to spark externally to the HV cover. This is the first time the cover has been tested to this high of a voltage due to the limitations of the modules. As such for the conditioning station to achieve 60kV while keeping the target hall open of personnel the cover and cage will need to be modified. To continue with HV testing of TM2 the cover was removed and the target hall locked out as per the procedure covered in Document 70039 "ISAC Conditioning Station: First Lock-Out and High-Voltage "ON". With the cover off the module was able to achieve ~56.7kV without the Einzel lens on. Eliminate the Einzel lens as a potential source of sparking it was brought to 25kV while the module continued conditioning. Maximum voltage achieve under this configuration was 57.1kV. Increments are now 50V steps. The Canbus continues to be very sensitive to any sparking and is slowing the process down considerably. It does however appear that the module is continuing to condition. I will continue tomorrow after the module moves to attempt to reach 60kV and hold it for 1 hour. |
553
|
Wednesday, November 20, 2013, 13:52 |
Bevan Moss | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | TM2 | | HV testing of TM2 |
HV testing without the cover continued today. With the EINZEL lens at 30kV the target module was able to achieve 58.7kV. At this voltage any spark was reeking havoc on the electronics of the TCS. Vacuum gauges signals were occasionally lost, the thermocouple reading would occasionally be lost, turbo pump would turn off. All of these events caused the interlocks to trip resulting in the power supplies to be turned off. As a result I bypassed majority of the interlocks to prevent this from happening. Ultimately as spark took out the CANBUS controller first for the EINZEL lens and then for the BIAS. David Morris has been contacted to have them replaced. The damage of the CANBUS controller for these power supplies is becoming a common problem and should be investigated for if there is a better solution. During testing I experimented with raising the BIAS to near its limit followed by the EINZEL lens and vise versa. From this it was determined that the EINZEL must be raised to high voltage before the BIAS otherwise sparking occurs. Even a step from 0 to 500 volts on the ENIZEL lens with the BIAS at 55kV caused sparking. There are a few combinations of testing along this line I would like to continue with but initially my though is that the BIAS and ENIZEL do not have sufficient clearance for the BIAS to operate above 55kV. Attached is a screen shot of the strip tool and the data. I have not heard from David yet but I do not expect the TCS to be operational today. |
565
|
Tuesday, December 03, 2013, 14:14 |
Bevan Moss | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | TM2 | | HV conditioning |
It was attempted to HV condition TM2 to 55kV and leave it operating there for an hour to demonstrate stability. Unfortunately at 52.65kV a spark destroyed the canbus controller. This controller had shown issues in the past but seemed to magically fixed itself. I will contact Hubert for another card. Attached is is a screen shot of the stip tools. |
575
|
Friday, December 06, 2013, 15:09 |
Bevan Moss | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | TM2 | | TM2 no source tray 55kV 1 hour |
Today 55kV was applied to TM2 and held for over 1 hour with the EINZEL at 27.5kV. There were 2 sparks and the current was unstable at this voltage but this test should be considered a success. Once again while bringing the voltage up the canbus continued to be a problem. After successfully passing the test I continued to raise the BIAS and EINZEL. A spark at 57kV tripped a controller for the vacuum and the canbus. As stated before I believe the module will reach 60kV and that there is an interaction between the EINZEL and the BIAS. I am not certain if that interaction is internal or external to the module. Attached is a screen shot and the dumped data. |
578
|
Thursday, December 12, 2013, 11:14 |
Bevan Moss | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | TM2 | | HV Chase Electrical Test |
While under vacuum Travis and I completed diagnostics of the HV chase. Majority of the lines showed OL at 1kV but there were the following "failures"
A to P @ 250V 716kOhm
A to Q @ 1kV 25.18MOhm
B to C with ohm meter 8Mohm @250V 830kOhm
B to D @ 1kV 15.57MOhm
C to D @1kV 16.18 MOhm
P to Q @1kV 1.069 GOhm
G to J with ohm meter dead short.
Ideally all of these values would be OL and they may improve or get worse when the source tray is installed depending on where the electrical contact is. I need to discuss with Friedhelm but I believe that as these values the module can still operate. Without changing the HV chase there is very little chance of improving these values. |
589
|
Thursday, January 30, 2014, 13:46 |
Travis Cave | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | TM2 | no target | module move |
TM#2 has been moved from the conditioning station to the south hot cell. |
601
|
Monday, February 17, 2014, 09:32 |
David Wang | Conditioning Station | Repair | TM2 | | helium pressure test on TM2 tube heater +(D) water line. |
I did the helium pressure test on Tube heater+ line this morning. The vacuum on CS and TM2 are very good. The base lake rate on leak detector was 1.7xE-7 atm.cc/sec. Base pressure was 0.0xE-4torr. I applied helium to the "D"line .The test started from 30psi up to 80psi on both side "D" line.The base leak rate slightly changed to 1.9xE-7 atm.cc/sec during the test,but not base pressure. At this base leak rate level, No obvious leak had been found . See attachment pictures. The test will be repeated later when the base leak rate could be pumped into E -8 or E-9(the best) range. |
602
|
Tuesday, February 18, 2014, 11:26 |
David Wang | Conditioning Station | Repair | TM2 | | I stopped turbo pumps and disconnected vacuum system on TM 2 and CS |
I stopped turbo pumps and disconnected vacuum system on TM2 and CS. The TM2 will be moved to SHC for C seal installation on "D" water block. |
603
|
Thursday, February 20, 2014, 09:45 |
Travis Cave | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | TM2 | no target | module move |
TM#2 has been moved from the conditioning station to the south hot cell. |
609
|
Tuesday, February 25, 2014, 10:00 |
David Wang | Conditioning Station | Repair | TM2 | | helium pressure test on TM2 tube heater (+) water line with blank off(C-seal) installed on WB. |
I did the helium pressure test on TM2 tube heater (+) water line with blank off(C-seal) installed on water block at CS.The leak detector was hooked directly to the top of the module this time. So base leak rate and base pressure were at the bottom scale on LD. 30 -80 psi helium was applied to the D lines(both side) with10 psi increasing each time. There is no any tiny response hasbeen found during the test. The lines are perfectly sealed. Also i sprayed the helium on the top of the service cap .All air to vacuum seals on the top are good either. See attachment pictures. |
611
|
Wednesday, March 05, 2014, 10:07 |
Travis Cave | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | TM2 | no target | module move |
TM#2 with no target or source tray has been moved from the conditioning station to the north east silo. TM#1 with no target has been moved into the conditioning station. |
612
|
Thursday, March 06, 2014, 06:28 |
David Wang | Conditioning Station | Maintenance | TM1 | | TM1 had been moved from silo to CS |
TM1 has been successfully moved from silo to CS. The CS vacuum system is connected to TM1. Turbo pumps on TM1 and CS have been started yesterday afternoon . The starting of TM1 turbos was easy. The pumping down over night is good so far. |
614
|
Thursday, March 06, 2014, 12:59 |
David Wang | Conditioning Station | Maintenance | TM1 | | Restart TM1 and CS TPs |
Restarted TM1 and CS turbo pumps after the power off. Everything is fine . |
615
|
Thursday, March 06, 2014, 14:12 |
David Wang | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | TM1 | | TM1 air to vacuum and water lines leak check at CS. |
TM1 air to vacuum and water lines leak check at CS are finished this afternoon. The leak detector is hooked directly to TM1 service cap so the base LR at LD is 0.0xE-9 atm.cc/sec. I sprayed helium to all air to vacuum seal on the service cap, also applied 70 psi to all water lines(except HS) for 2 minutes each. There is no any tiny response had been found on LD. So All TM1 water lines(except HS) and air to vacuum seals are leak free. The HS circuit can not be tested at this time since the VCR caps are not installed. The turbo pumps at CS and TM1 will be turned off before I leave. See attachment pictures. |
627
|
Thursday, March 20, 2014, 08:19 |
Travis Cave | Conditioning Station | Standard Operation | TM1 | no target | module move |
TM#1 with no target moved from the conditioning station to north west silo. |