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Reduce outage time, cut cost by repairing

Frame 5 compressor with the rotor in-situ


Posted on June 3, 2015 by Team CCJ

Coverage of the Frame 5 rightly belongs in CTOTF’s™ GE Legacy


Roundtable chaired by NRG Energy Inc’s Ed Wong, PE. But that
forum is held only at the user group’s fall meetings and the hook-fit
repair experience TVA’s Nathan Holland, vice chair of the GE F-class
Roundtable, had to share was timely. Plus, most attendees at the GE
E- & EA-class Roundtable, where Holland presented, likely have one
or more Frame 5s in their portfolios.
As most Frame 5 owner/operators are aware, the thin ligament at
the 10th-stage extraction slot in the compressor is a weak spot in
the machine. It forms the hook that holds one side of the ninth-
stage compressor stator vanes in place. Fig 1 shows the area of
interest as well as the damage caused when the casing cracks,
allowing one or more vanes to work free and go downstream. Fig 2
shows the damage south of the ninth stage in greater detail.

Rodger Anderson, manager of GT technology for DRS Technologies


Inc, told the editors he has seen this type of failure in many Frame
5s over the years. He said it is the result of a gray cast iron casing
weakened by (1) corrosion, (2) the uplift loading on the ligament
area created by airflow through the compressor, and (3) the
numerous start/stop cycles associated with peaking service. Keep in
mind that gray cast iron has poor tensile and fatigue properties.

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The casing cracks before failure, Anderson continued, and the vane
loading will propagate the crack. Thus regular checks of casing
condition in the extraction cavity during borescope inspections can
warn of impending failure (Fig 3) and enable corrective action before
serious damage occurs.
Industry experience with cracking of the ninth-stage hook fit is that
it can be expected on peaking units with more than about 1000
starts/5000 service hours over a nominal 30-yr period. TVA’s 16
dual-fuel peaking Frame 5Ns (a/k/a Nancys) at one site were beyond
that, approaching 40 years of service; in round numbers they
averaged 2000 starts/6000 operating hours. Plus, two engines in
this group had suffered forced outages because of in-service hook-fit
failures.
The utility’s original repair technique required performing a major
inspection with the unit rotor removed to access the compressor
casings for hook-fit repairs—a costly approach. With outages
planned for the remaining 5Ns at this site by the end of 2019, an
alternative solution was sought to reduce outage cost and duration,
and still provide a quality hook-fit repair.
Industry sources suggested a less intrusive method, which
eliminated the need to remove the rotor to make hook-fit repairs.
These are the steps:
o Remove the upper half of the forward and aft compressor
casings.
o Roll out the lower half of the aft compressor casing (Fig
4).

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o Machine the ninth-stage hook fit offsite.
o Bolt the patch ring in place axially.
o Reinstall the lower-half aft casing.
o Reinstall the upper half of the forward and aft compressor
casings.

Six patch rings already have been installed using the rotor-in
technique (Method 2) at about one-third the cost and one-third the
duration of the original method. Even in cases where the rotor must
be removed, the speaker recommended pulling the lower half of the
aft compressor casing to machine the hook fit. This allows bolting
together both casing halves and machining a 360-deg patch ring,
thereby reducing the risk of radial clearance issues.
Lessons learned included the following:
o Weld and grind flush axial patch-ring bolting.
o Where multiple units are involved, project synergies can
reduce cost and schedule.
o Secure compressor stator vanes into the casing before
rolling out the lower half.
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TIL 1304 3 - 9th Stage Stator Casing Hook Fit Cracking

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