Washington PUD relies on thermal imaging to keep the lights on for residents
By EPR Magazine Editorial March 8, 2018 11:57 am IST
By EPR Magazine Editorial March 8, 2018 11:57 am IST
While Mason County residents are at home on a cold winter night with their heat turned up, TV on, food cooking, and loads of laundry running, Chris Jorgensen of Mason Public Utility District (PUD) 3 is outside checking power lines and equipment. PUD 3 provides electricity and wholesale telecommunication services to more than 34,000 people in Washington state. If they don’t catch problems early, thousands of customers could lose power.
Prevent damage before it happens
November through March, when the electrical load is highest, and the likelihood of a breakdown is greater, PUD 3 engineers spend 5 to 6 hours in the late evening
inspecting power lines, connections, and equipment with a FLIR thermal imaging
camera. “We start with our substations, then we’ll do our 3-phase distribution lines,” said Jorgensen. The thermal camera helps them identify hot spots on the electrical system, so they can prevent failures before they occur.”
Jorgensen adds, “We drive down the road and one of us scans out the window with the thermal camera to spot check. If we see something, we get out and do a full analysis.”
PUD 3 has been using thermal cameras for inspections since 2001. “Before we had thermal imaging there was no way to do preventive maintenance. Equipment failed and we went out and fixed it,” Jorgensen said. But with a FLIR thermal camera they could save time looking for issues without getting out of the vehicle and catch problems before they cause an outage.
The infrared inspection program at PUD 3 helps make their electrical system safe, reliable, and saves the utility company thousands of dollars by conducting maintenance during regular business hours. The alternative is a major outage – one that could occur at night or on a weekend – and result in more expensive overtime work hours for the PUD 3 crew.
Prioritise and schedule repairsThe benefits of catching hot spots early include extending the life of otherwise well-functioning equipment; prevention of equipment failures that could lead to widespread outages; and reduction of costs through maintenance as opposed to replacement of damaged equipment.
“Thermal imaging really allows us to see what the naked eye can’t see,” said Jorgensen. “It allows us to fix these problems before a failure, and
it has been a huge benefit to the utility.”
For more details, visit www.flir.com
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