October 15-17, 2013 Tulsa, Oklahoma
The trainees will be led through this fast-paced three day course by a current field trainer and former substation technician. Robert brings 36 years of experience in the electrical field. He is eager to share his experiences in using electrical prints for maintenance, troubleshooting, relaying, metering, equipment commissioning, and, most importantly, safety while switching.
Click on the titles below to learn all about Electrical Print Reading:
Curriculum
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Receive presentations on:
- Electrical print terminology. One line, three line, ladder, schematic, power scheme, control scheme, and more
- Symbols, devices numbers, and abbreviations: what do they mean? How do they work with each other?
- Switching – Your print is the road map. Can you read the signs?
- Control schematics – AC/DC, basic theory, applications, voltages, and troubleshooting tips
- Power circuit breaker – physical layout, CT and bushing numbering, and control scheme
- Basic relay schematics – How does the print apply to testing, commissioning, and troubleshooting?
- Logic diagrams – AND, OR, NOT, series, parallel, How are they related?
- Safety in troubleshooting – Multi-meter use, shorts, opens, grounds, and line of fires
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You will learn:
- The principles of reading electrical prints
- How to identify different types of electrical prints
- How to identify symbols and device numbers
- How to draw basic one line, ladder, and panel wiring prints
- How to use electrical prints for troubleshooting and testing
- How to use electrical prints for safe switching procedures
- Why electrical prints are important whether you are a substation tech, a telecom tech, a lineman, etc.
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Pre-requisites
Prerequisites for this course include: 1) Previous experience in the electrical field 2) A working knowledge of D.C. and A.C. theory with practical experience in circuit analysis and troubleshooting will be helpful 3) Knowledge of IEEE Device numbers will also be helpful but not necessary.
The training will benefit students who are focused on a career in the utility industry which involves maintenance, troubleshooting, and testing equipment such as relays, meters, circuit breakers, and transformers.
ENOSERV Training Facility
ENOSERV training courses are held at the ENOSERV Training Facility in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Only ENOSERV presents training on any type of test set with numerous electromechanical and digital relay types. All classrooms were built from the ground up with only relay testing training in mind. Refreshments and catered lunches (entrees, sides, desserts) will be provided by ENOSERV.
The address of the ENOSERV Training Facility:
7780 E 106th Street
Tulsa, OK 74133
Cost
$1645. Credit card payments accepted online. Registration link is below.
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Register