David Clark/Director/Turningpoint Inc., El Dorado Hills, Calif./turningpointwind.com
While condition monitoring technologies can track many signals, its purpose boils down to detecting wear and preventing the eventual failure of monitored components. Not all megawatt-class wind turbine drivetrains are monitored with the intent to catch degrading components. A few frequently encountered conditions are not caused by wear, making them correctable.
These conditions, when left uncorrected, manifest themselves in damaged components along with associated collateral damage. This is the typical pay-a-little-now-or-a-lot-later scenario. The task is certainly one for condition monitoring, but this topic could be called “correctible detection”. Here’s an overview of three common correctible conditions along with how they can be detected and corrected.
Misalignment

Connected shafts often suffer from angular (top) or offset, and parallel misalignment. All are detectable and correctable.
It’s common between the gearbox output (or high-speed shaft) and the generator input shaft. Causes include a flexible
bedplate, large temperature variations, cantilevered mounting, thermal growth, and others. It is prevalent enough that some manufacturers recommend shaft alignment at prescribed intervals while others specify laser-based tools for aligning this portion of the turbine. “Because of the dynamic movement and flexibility of the turbine, alignment tolerances are much broader than what we see in standard industrial applications,” says alignment expert Paul Berberian of Alignment Supplies Inc. “Sometimes acceptable wind-turbine-alignment specifications are 2 to 4 times higher than those found elsewhere.” When left uncorrected, high-speed-shaft bearings and generator input-shaft bearings suffer and fail at a faster
Detection: Vibration analysis detects misalignment remotely and over a progression indicated by a specific vibration signature detailing the fault. Misalignment saps production and performance. The graphs in Before and after balancing shows a vibration reading or FFT spectrum between a misaligned gearbox and generator coupling. The vibration signals come from remote monitoring. The lower signal is partly due to aligned shafts.

Regardless of manufacture, most turbines have a main bearing, gearbox, and generator. These are the top three causes of wind-turbine downtime and together account for 60% of all problems.
Correction: An alignment using lasers has largely replaced older, more time consuming methods. The alignment tool mounts across the coupling with two lasers pointing at laser detectors. The shaft is rotated 180° or less and three points are taken to define a circle. The lasers represent the shaft centerlines so the difference in the two lasers provide a measure of misalignment which is corrected at least two ways:
• The generator’s mount-ing pads can be shimmed up or down to correct mis-alignment in those directions.
• The generator’s “jack bolts” can be moved side to side to correct misalignment in those directions.
Looseness
If you have ever been in a wind turbine, you have noticed things move around up there. Because of the nacelle’s yawing and pitching, things may come loose. When parts break, it is usually due to being under repetitive or fatigue loads they were never intended to handle. Such failures can be real photo opportunities.
Detection: Vibration analysis detects looseness as multiple frequency peaks.
One can remotely isolate the source of vibration without an up-tower climb. This is a decent alternative to climbing and checking everything that could be loose.
Correction: This one is easy – tighten what’s loose to the specified torque.
Imbalance
The image Before and after balancing shows vibration signals from those periods. Several components are susceptible to imbalance in a typical wind turbine. These include generator fans, generator rotors, and couplings to name a few. The causes of an increase in imbalance can range from simple things such as debris build-up on blades to material degradation, and possibly damage in the field.
Blade imbalance was once a major issue on smaller and much older wind turbines, mostly kilowatt-class machines. A common solution was to add balance weights of up to a few pounds. As the industry has grown, so have blade manufacturing methods. Much improved quality control allows creating matched blade sets weighing within close tolerances.

Misalignment comes in several variations, each of which is detectable and correctable. Parallel misalignment, for example, can produce vibration signals of this sort.
Detection: Using vibration analysis, you can see imbalance clearly and its degree. There are a few different types of imbalance, each having a unique vibration signature. There are also a few different types of balancing dependent upon the machine and type of imbalance detected.
Correction:There is a three step procedure for balancing in a single plane. Getting started requires a vibration analyzer, tachometer (or strobe light), vibration accelerometer, and a constant running speed. It also requires eliminating any looseness and misalignment prior to attempting to balance a component. The three-step method first calls for a:
• Baseline run. This is where vibration from the imbalance is initially measured, creating a baseline.
• A trial run then attaches a weight as a trial to induce a 30-30 rule. This means you are looking for a 30% increase or reduction in vibration, or a 30% shift in phase. This also means the trial weight has had...(Read whole article/video)
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