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Posts Tagged ‘Emergency Transformers’

Emergency Replacement Transformer for Failed Transformer

January 7th, 2011 Comments off

What do you do if your manufacturing company suddenly loses its main 5000 kva, 34.5 kv to 480 volt transformer? You have orders pending. And if you can’t fill them, a key account may go elsewhere. You have employees suddenly out of work.  You need to heat the buildings.  And you are told it will take 10 weeks to get a new replacement transformer. This is one of a manufacturer’s worse nightmares. What to do? This happens more frequently than one may realize. MIDWEST actually recommends a “Disaster Action Plan,” on the shelf, ready to go, in case of such a nightmare.

 

MIDWEST receives these calls all too frequently. You might be fortunate and MIDWEST have a replacement reconditioned or used 5000 kva transformer that can be shipped immediately. No one has new transformers this size in stock. And many companies will not accept anything but a new replacement power transformer. In that case, the best solution is to rent a temporary transformer that will provide power until a new replacement transformer can be specified and manufactured. A new replacement transformer may take 10 weeks.

 

Renting transformers, and other electrical equipment, is a common solution to this critical problem. The first big question to ask when such an emergency occurs is, “Do you want power back on permanently as quickly as possible or do you just want power back on as quickly as possible?”  There is a huge difference in the time to perform either of these solutions. And way too often there is the presumption that one just must get power back on permanently. This presumption continues until the customer realizes how long it will actually take. Meanwhile many hours, even days, are wasted by chasing the wrong solution.

 

So the most critical event is to decide how fast one wants power restored.  MIDWEST has transformers, temporary high voltage cables and low voltage cables, and switches in stock.  But, more important, is the knowledge that temporary power installations can be a life saver for a facility that is suddenly down.

Old Obsolete Good Scrap Transformers

November 8th, 2010 2 comments

MIDWEST was asked what we did with perfectly good obsolete or old used transformers. Bit of an oxymoron since obsolete might be understood to mean no longer any good. But the intent of the question was obvious. Transformers that are too old to be sold in the used transformer market might be maintained in MIDWEST’s pool of rental, temporary, and emergency transformers or they are just scrapped. Typically a rental transformer is just for temporary use. But we have had many transformers on rental for over a year. Especially larger Mva transformers. We have a few we didn’t scrap out but kept around solely because of the special voltages or size or physical configuration, to be used in those rare occasions when a manufacturing company, for example, is in trouble with delivery of a special replacement transformer. This usually happens when they had a non typical transformer suddenly fail. The difference between these special temporary transformers, which we sometimes call cling-ons, and our rental transformers is that we’d really like to get rid of the cling-ons. But about every time we think we’ll scrap out an obsolete old unit, we get a desperate call and it is the only thing that will work and the only one the customer can find. So it is resuscitated again and lives on. We do have fewer of these than ten years ago. We just scrapped out a 2000 Kva oil filled power transformer, 13,200 volts to a variable secondary of 120 volts to 600 volts. Weighed 18,000 pounds. A big old power transformer, specially built for a transformer power lab about 60 years ago. We finally got rid of it because we never rented it in two decades; And we did not have a good biography on the unit, although all our test results were good. The install cost as a rental, emergency, or temporary transformer would have been potentially huge because of the oversize and weight due to the many voltage taps. A potential customer would only need one functional voltage and would be paying a premium for a monster oil filled power transformer when they probably could find a unit with their specific voltage. Plus MIDWEST can not rent a transformer we no longer have full confidence in, even during an emergency. In the last month we designated over ten transformers to the scrap heap. Mainly because of a lack of full confidence in their reliability, even though many of them had good test results. MIDWEST knows electrical tests, on used oil filled and dry type power transformers, are not a perfect indication of the condition of the transformers. So MIDWEST looks for reasons to get rid of the old and the cling-ons.