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High Potential Testing Motor Windings with Very Low Frequency

  • October 2021
  • Number of views: 11307
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Chase Fell
Technical Education Committee Chair
Jay Industrial Repair

High potential (hipot) testing procedures for motor and generator windings are usually performed with 50/60 Hz AC or DC as the power source. Hipot testing is a critical step in validating the quality of new windings. AC and DC hipot tests are also useful to understand the condition of aged insulation for machines in service. DC hipot testing is widely used in motor repair because the equipment is portable, and the steady state test current comes mostly from leakage through the insulation.

When a breakdown occurs, DC causes less damage to material adjacent to the fault when compared to AC tests. A disadvantage of DC testing is the voltage is not distributed in the same way as what the winding sees with AC. Specifically, the DC test stresses the end turns much higher.

AC hipot testing is much more consistent with the voltage stress of the machine in service. Studies have shown that the AC hipot test can reveal insulation defects that are left undetected with DC tests. An AC test can better detect voids and delamination inside the insulation system. The disadvantage of the AC test at power frequency is when the size of the test set and/or complexity of the setup becomes problematic in motor repair and in the field.

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