Fault Locating Overview Presented by Gary Morris
Fault Locating Overview Presented by Gary Morris
Fault Locating Overview Presented by Gary Morris
965AMS
Outline
Fault Locating
RFL
TDR
Fault Locating
When to Use TDR and RFL
Opens and TDR for Capacitive Faults
RFL and TDR for Resistive Faults
RFL
Load Coil
Yes
No
Tip/Ring Open
Yes
No
Water
Yes
No
Bridge Tap
Yes
No
High Res
Opens
Yes
No
Yes
Tip Ground
No
Yes
Ring Ground
No
Yes
Battery Crosses
No
Yes
Short
TDR
Press the TDR
key
Choose Setup to enter cable information.
When finished choose a test and press OK
TDR Short
Here is a pair the has an short at 1000 feet.
TDR Water
Approximately 100 Feet of water.
2.
3.
There three factors that is always involved in RFL (Resistance Fault Locating) - Gauge, Length and
Temperature of the cable. Any two of the three must be known for RFL to work. The best option is to know the
Gauge and Length of the section under test and the test set will compute the cable temperature. This is done
during RFL Setup.
4.
A pair may have some light faults in it but it can be used as a Good Pair as long as the light fault is at least 200
times better than the magnitude of the fault in the faulted pair. Ex: If the fault on a pair is 1 kilo-ohms, a pair
with a 200 kilo-ohm fault can be used as a good pair. Of course, the higher the magnitude, the better.
5.
For best RFL accuracy , make a long cable section shorter by going to the middle of the section and open the
pair to cut it in half. Check for the fault in one direction and then the other and then isolate the clean side.
Repeat the process until the cable section becomes short enough where the following becomes practical:
a)
the length of a short section can easily be measured physically with a roller tape. If gauge and section
length are known, the test set will compute cable temperature.
b)
With a short cable section, the use of a reel of jumper wire as a Good Pair placed above ground is now
possible, instead of digging into the cable for a good one. Saves time. With a separate good pair and
knowing the gauge and length of the section is the best and most accurate RFL option.
6.
In a Single Pair Hookup, the best good conductor to use is the mate of the faulted one and the next best is any
good conductor from any of the adjacent pairs in the same group. Ex: If a pair has TIP(A) is faulted and
RING(B) is good, RING(B) is then the best good conductor to use to shoot the fault on TIP(A).
7.
If DTF (Distance-To-Fault) and DTS (Distance-To-Strap) are equal, the fault is either at the strap or beyond.
RFL TIPS
The use of a
Separate Good Pair
is always the most accurate way to
locate any type of a resistance fault.
Resistance Faults
GROUND : A fault between Tip [A] and Ground, Ring [B] and Ground or both conductors and Ground.
-48 VDC
Cross Fault
Water
-46 VDC
-7 VDC
Pair # 2 - Non-working
(Pair under test)
End-2
or
Good Pair
End-1
Good Pair
Strap
Faulted Pair
Ground
Near-End
Shield/Ground
Fault
Far-End
Good Pair
End-1
Strap
Fault
Common
Faulted Pair
Faulted Pair
Short
Near-End
Far-End
Strap
extension
End-1
Far-End Strap
Faulted Pair
Near-End
Short
Common
Far-End
End-2
Aerial Cable:
1. If cable is not in direct sunlight. Add 20 oF to the air temperature.
2. If cable is in direct sunlight. Add 40oF to the air temperature.
Buried Cable:
1. Use temperature of tap water (city water). Let water flow out of a water
faucet for several
minutes and then measure the temperature.
2. In cold climates, use soil temperature at cable depth.
RFL Cont..
Press setup to
change section
1 from 24 awg
to 26 awg.
3640.8 ft
234.8 ft
3406 ft
= 4000 feet
= 2500 feet
= 1500 feet
3000
3000
ft ft
500
500ft ft
400ftft
400
= 4000 feet
= 1000 feet
= 3000 feet
Fault
measures
here!
1000
ft
1000
3000
3000
ft ft
ft
500ft ft
500
400 ftft
400
= 3900 feet
= 400 feet
= 3500 feet
Fault
measures
here!
1000
ft
1000
3000
3000
ft ft
ft
500ft ft
500
400 ftft
400
Questions ?
Live Demo
1-800-426-8688 Option 3