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How to schedule

To schedule private education for your group, contact:

Dale Shuter, CMP
Meetings & Expositions Manager

+1 314 993 2220, ext. 3335
dshuter@easa.com

1 hour of training

$300 for EASA Chapters/Regions
$400 for member companies
$800 for non-members

How a webinar works

All EASA private webinars are live events in which the audio and video are streamed to your computer over the Internet. Prior to the program, you will receive a web link to join the meeting. 

The presentation portion of the webinar will last about 45 minutes, followed by about 15 minutes of questions and answers.

Requirements

  • Internet connection
  • Computer with audio input (microphone) and audio output (speakers) appropriate for your size group
  • TV or projector/screen

Zoom logo

The Zoom webinar service EASA uses will ask to install a small plugin. Your computer must be configured to allow this in order to have full functionality. Please check with your IT department or company's security policy prior to scheduling a private webinar.

Private Webinars

EASA's private webinars are an inexpensive way to bring an EASA engineer into your service center, place of business or group meeting without incurring travel expenses or lost production time.

Convention presentation

Electrical Tests: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

  • July 2013
  • Number of views: 4783
  • Article rating:

Chuck Yung
EASA Senior Technical Support Specialist

Although the rotating equipment repair industry has been around for over a century, technology continues to introduce new test instruments and procedures. Some of these are good: surge test, growler, core loss test; some are bad: core testing a rotor at 60 times its operating frequency, or performing a Hipot at several times the prescribed value; and some are just plain ugly.

This paper will help you to sort out which are which, and help educate your customers as to the reasons why. Standards organizations (IEEE, ANSI, IEC) have developed specific tests, with much scientific thought as to how stringent a test should be. ANSI/EASA AR100: Recommended Practice for the Repair of Rotating Electrical Apparatus consistently references the relevant standard(s) for each test.

This paper, presented at the 2013 EASA Convention, summarizes the accepted and other electrical tests required by motor and generator end users. It covers:

  • Various standards (IEEE, IEC, NEMA, ANSI and API) that describe and legitimize most of the tests used by our industry
  • Other tests, not supported by any recognized standards, that end users request repairers to perform
  • An outline of these tests, with supporting standards, which should be useful when discussing testing requirements with end users

Available Downloads



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