GIS Substation Maintenance - A Practical Checklist for Field Teams

Hongzhe Electrical Technical Content TeamPublié le 2026-06-164 min de lecture
GIS MaintenanceSF6 EquipmentContact Resistance
GIS substation maintenance tools for field teams

GIS substation maintenance should combine gas handling, insulation checks, contact condition, mechanical inspection, and records. A checklist helps field teams plan outage work, select tools, avoid missed measurements, and create evidence that supports later reliability decisions and RFQ planning clearly.

Direct answer

GIS substation maintenance should combine gas handling, insulation checks, contact condition, mechanical inspection, and records. A checklist helps field teams plan outage work, select tools, avoid missed measurements, and create evidence that supports later reliability decisions and RFQ planning clearly.

What should a GIS maintenance checklist include?

A GIS maintenance checklist should cover SF6 gas condition, leak inspection, partial discharge screening, contact resistance, insulation tests, mechanical operation, auxiliary circuits, and documentation. The goal is not to collect random readings, but to connect each measurement with a bay, compartment, tool setting, acceptance rule, and next action.

GIS parts and maintenance equipment

Core maintenance items

ItemWhat to checkTypical tool or record
SF6 gas pressure and densityDensity monitor reading, pressure trend, alarm historyGas density monitor, service record
SF6 leak pointsFlanges, valves, filling ports, density monitor jointsPortable leak detector
Gas handlingRecovery, evacuation, filling, hose and connector matchService cart, vacuum pump, GIS filling connector
Partial dischargeUHF, ultrasonic, TEV or offline test evidencePD detector or test system
Contact resistanceMain circuit contact conditionMicro-ohm test set when available
Insulation resistance or withstandInsulation condition by approved procedureHigh voltage test equipment
Mechanical operationClosing/opening time, interlock, drive inspectionTiming record and visual checklist
DocumentationPhotos, settings, calibration, before/after readingsMaintenance report

The checklist should be adjusted by voltage class, GIS manufacturer, outage scope, age, and utility rules. Hongzhe's GIS parts category and GIS spare parts replacement solution are useful when the same maintenance job includes connectors, valves, insulators, density monitors, or replacement parts.

SF6 gas handling

Gas handling is often the highest-risk part of the job because poor recovery or wrong connectors can extend the outage. Confirm gas type, compartment volume, target recovery pressure, hose length, valve photos, cylinder plan, and site power supply before the team mobilizes. A SF6 service cart is normally planned with a GIS filling connector, hose set, adapters, and leak detection.

After recovery or filling, record cylinder numbers, gas mass if available, final pressure, density monitor status, and any abnormal leak readings. Do not rely only on a final pressure value; scan flanges, filling valves, density monitor joints, and recent gasket work.

SF6 service cart for GIS maintenance

PD and insulation inspection

Partial discharge inspection helps find internal particles, protrusions, spacer defects, floating components, and surface discharge. UHF sensors are common for GIS because the enclosure can carry high-frequency signals. Ultrasonic probes can help locate some surface or mechanical sources. If the project needs formal diagnosis, define whether it follows an online screening route or an offline procedure using the partial discharge measurement category.

Insulation resistance, withstand testing, or other high-voltage checks should follow utility-approved procedures. The RFQ should state voltage class, test voltage, grounding plan, discharge method, report format, and whether the test is part of commissioning, routine service, or fault investigation.

Contact resistance and mechanical records

Contact resistance testing checks the condition of current paths, contacts, and joints. Stable low readings support reliable current carrying; rising or uneven values can indicate loose connection, wear, contamination, or poor contact pressure. Record test current, connection point, temperature if required, and instrument calibration.

Mechanical inspection should include operating mechanism condition, interlocks, gas density monitor mounting, control cabinet status, heaters, auxiliary switches, wiring terminals, and counter readings. Photos are useful when replacement parts must be sourced from drawings or samples.

Maintenance cycle

Routine visual checks may be monthly or quarterly, while detailed outage inspection is often planned annually or by utility interval. Leak response, density alarm investigation, and post-repair verification should happen as events occur. Critical bays and older GIS need tighter trend review than new assets with clean history.

FAQ

Should every GIS outage include PD testing?

Not always. PD screening is valuable for critical bays, abnormal history, commissioning, or after internal work. The method should match sensor access, noise level, and reporting requirements.

What information should a GIS maintenance RFQ include?

Include voltage class, bay count, gas compartment volume, connector photos, gas type, required tests, outage window, standards, destination, and report documents.

Can one team use the same tools for all GIS brands?

Basic test tools may be shared, but gas connectors, valves, density monitor interfaces, and some sensors vary by manufacturer. Confirm photos, drawings, and thread details before shipment.

Request a quote - include GIS voltage class, bay count, SF6 gas volume, connector photos, test list, and outage schedule.