Title: Meter Testing - Traditional
1Meter Testing - Traditional New Techniques
GE Meter School
- Presented by
- T Jeffrey Wolters
- GE Meter, Somersworth, NH
- The following people designed, developed or
provided the substance for the material
presented - Dave Elmore, Don Bullock (ret), Les Rosenau, Mike
Coit, Warren Germer, Joe Provost
2Some K Definitions
- Kh - Watt-hours per (equivalent) disk revolution
- Ke - Energy value per pulse (used commonly for
PI) - K - Register programming watt-hour constant (for
EV, Kh/12 K) - Kt - Test constant Watt-hours (or VArH) per
pulse - Kr - Dial Multiplier
- Inside the kV, K values have no real meaning or
bearing on energy calculations. All energy values
are supplied from the DSP in engineering units.
3GE kV Meter Test LED
Test LED
4GE kV Meter Functional Diagram
- DSP blinks the Optocom LED every Kt watt-hours
(or VArh) - Through programming, one can set the calibration
pulse rate (Kt) to just about any practical
value. This can - allow one to adjust testing speed (within the
confines of other, more restrictive parameters) - standardize pulse values regardless of meter
type. - Remember the kV DSP outputs (and the register
stores) actual energy values rather than pulses
which can be converted to energy values.
5Kt Value Selections
- The kV meter offers a great deal of flexibility
in specifying Kt (test pulse) and PI (Pulse
Initiator) values. - To obtain the most accurate results, it is
important to understand more about how the kV
calculates its values. - There is a number stored in the kVs firmware
which is responsible for making the math work
based on meter class. - Rev3 below Rev 04 above
- Meter Class kV divisor kV divisor
- 20 0.0006 0.0005
- 200 0.006 0.005
- 320 0.009 0.0075
6Kt Value Selections
- Rev3 below Rev 04 above
- Meter Class kV divisor kV divisor
- 20 0.0006 0.0005
- 200 0.006 0.005
- 320 0.009 0.0075
- The use of Kt (and PI) values that are evenly
divisible by these numbers will prevent small
errors from being introduced due to truncation of
repeating or long decimal values. - Most traditional Kt (and PI) value selections
provide error-free operation, or contain
insignificant errors.
7Kt Value Selections
- To calculate the magnitude of any possible error,
use the formula above. - Example Use a Kt value of 1.0 on a CL 20 meter,
Firmware 3 - 1-((Integer(1/0.0006))/(1/0.0006))x100
- 1-(1666/1666.666)x100
- 0.04 error
8Kt Value Selections
- Now Use a Kt value of 1.0 on a CL 20 meter,
Firmware 4 - 1-((Integer(1/0.0005))/(1/0.0005))x100
- 1-(2000/2000)x100
- 0.00 error
9Some Factors Affecting Measurement Uncertainty
- Total meter performance is a function of many
variables. - The methods we use to verify the meters
performance are also subject to many variables. - In general, any variable which affects the meter
and the standard differently will lead to
UNCERTAINTY.
10Some Factors Affecting Measurement Uncertainty
- In digital meters, the more obvious factors
affecting uncertainty include - Repeatability limits of the test equipment being
used - Random systematic errors including response
time and characteristics of the meter calibration
LED circuit and the test equipment optotransistor
circuit used in the pickup device - Digitizing error (remember we reduced this by
careful selection of sampling rate) - Inherent measurement differences between filtered
and unfiltered methods of measuring AC power - Temperature, frequency, stray magnetic fields,
current and voltage non-linearities...
11Measurement Uncertainty Example
- Inherent measurement differences between filtered
and unfiltered methods of measuring AC power
- Take two meters having equal accuracy
- The first, a heavily filtered meter (e.g.,
RadianTM standard). It integrates average power
with respect to time - The second, an unfiltered meter (e.g., GE kV
meter). It integrates instantaneous power with
respect to time.
12Measurement Uncertainty Example
Inherent measurement differences between filtered
and unfiltered methods of measuring AC power
- Compare the meters power calculation during the
time interval from a to b in the figure. - The unfiltered meter will record energy
proportional to the horizontally shaded area plus
the cross-shaded area. - The filtered meter will record energy
proportional to the cross-shaded area.
13Measurement Uncertainty Example
Inherent measurement differences between filtered
and unfiltered methods of measuring AC power
- In this example, the Instantaneous power
measurement is obviously larger than the Average
power measurement. For other small time
differences (a and b), Average power could be
larger or the same. - As test time increases, the effect of this source
of uncertainty disappears. Also, if you could
test over an exact integral number of cycles,
this uncertainty would not exist.
14GE kV Flash Calibration
- Flash Calibration Objective
- Calibrate voltage gain, voltage phase, current
gain and current phase - Accomplish multiple measurements simultaneously
- Minimize calibration time
- Minimize number of conditions necessary to assure
overall meter accuracy
15GE kV Flash Calibration
- How Flash Calibration Works
- Meter is put into Flash Cal Mode via Optocom
- Meter blinks Optocom LED and starts
accumulation - After specified time, meter stops accumulation
and blinks LED - Accumulated quantities are read and compared to
standard meters - New correction factors are calculated and
programmed into the meter as required - Rerun until all results are acceptable
16GE kV Flash Calibration
- How Flash Calibration Works (cont)
- Factory has independent, per-phase equipment
- Meter Flash Calibrated at FL and LAG
- Meter verified using both Flash Calibrate mode
AND pulse mode - Total Flash Cal time is just a few seconds
- How can we do that? ... Remember, if you choose
an amount of time that is an exact integral
number of power cycles, there is no uncertainty
error between instantaneous and average power
measurements.
179S vs 8S Testing Conditions
- Why doesnt the 9S kV meter seem to test
correctly on my calibration panel set up for an
8S meter? - The socket terminal connections are the same.
- The actual (in)SERVICE phasors presented will be
read by either meter. In fact, since the 9S meter
is a Blondel solution, it will properly meter
unbalanced conditions, where the 8S will not. - The problem is that most test panels do not (by
default) apply the voltages the way they would be
presented in service. They treat the 8S as a two
voltage element device, applying one voltage A-B
and the other C-N. For the 8S, this is good
enough to test, but for the 9S kV, there is no
real A-N voltage reference since the A-B voltage
is subjected to a voltage divider between kVs
A-N and B-N voltage sensing resistors. - In service, this is not a problem because the
line to neutral volts are all independently
regulated by the distribution transformers.
189S vs 8S Testing Conditions
- Some test panels can be configured to present a
more realistic 4 wire delta input to the meter
under test. - This can also be used on 8S meters.
19kV Test Voltages
- Typically, apply Test Voltage (TV nameplate).
120v. - Other voltage(s) may be used. Wide range meter is
120-480v Line to Line (not Line to Neutral). - WHEN TESTING, DO NOT APPLY 480 L-N.
- IN POLYPHASE, THIS WILL EXCEED THE 575V LIMIT ON
THE POWER SUPPLY - WITH REVENUE GUARD, THIS WILL EXCEED THE 575V
LIMIT ON THE POWER SUPPLY AND THE REVENUE GUARD
OPTION BOARD. - Be aware of test board power supply limitations
- some boards were not designed with newer meter
switch-mode power supplies in mind. - Test board error magnitudes typically increase
with test voltage increase.