United Kingdom
View the UK registered office details.
UK Registered Office
Gretna, Dumfriesshire
Scotland
DG16 5DP
APS provides specialist testing and diagnostic assessment of circuit breakers, disconnectors, switchgear contacts and current-carrying joints, verifying mechanical performance, contact integrity, operating condition and suitability for commissioning, continued service or energisation.
Specialist MV and HV circuit breaker timing, contact resistance measurement and diagnostic testing — verifying mechanical performance, contact condition, coil integrity and operating function in accordance with IEC 62271, IEEE C37 and CIGRE practice, for commissioning acceptance, maintenance assessment and asset-risk review.
Circuit breakers are the primary protection and switching devices in a power system. Correct operation depends on the interrupter, operating mechanism, trip and close circuits, auxiliary contacts, control wiring, the spring or hydraulic/pneumatic drive and the protection interface working together as a system. Contact wear, incorrect adjustment, elevated contact resistance, slow operating time or poor synchronism between poles can all degrade fault-clearing performance and increase the risk of equipment damage, arc-flash exposure, unplanned outage or protection maloperation.
Contact resistance testing assesses the condition of current-carrying paths — main breaker contacts, bolted joints, busbar connections, disconnectors, cable terminations and switchgear interfaces. Elevated resistance across any of these paths indicates contamination, oxidation, loose connections, contact wear, poor assembly or a developing overheating risk that may not yet be visible on a thermal image but will worsen under load.
Testing can be carried out at commissioning, during periodic maintenance, after a fault, during planned shutdowns, as part of a condition assessment programme, or to support asset-replacement decisions. APS verifies whether circuit breakers and their associated current-carrying contacts are mechanically functional, electrically sound and suitable for energisation or continued operation — combining diagnostic interpretation with IEC, IEEE and CIGRE practice to move beyond pass/fail numbers to a clear engineering conclusion.
Main circuit resistance is measured using the DC micro-ohm method — the four-wire (Kelvin) technique, in which the current injection and voltage measurement circuits are entirely separate, eliminating the resistance of test leads and connection points from the reading. This gives a true measurement of the resistance across the contact path under test, typically at a test current of 100 A or greater to replicate realistic current-carrying conditions in the contact interface.
IEC 62271-1 and the manufacturer’s acceptance criteria define the maximum permissible main circuit resistance for each circuit breaker type and rating. A reading above the manufacturer’s limit, significantly above baseline from previous tests, or inconsistent between phases is a diagnostic indicator — not just a pass/fail number. A reading elevated by 20–30% above baseline may indicate the onset of contact wear or surface contamination that should be monitored. A reading two to three times the manufacturer limit typically indicates significant contact degradation, incorrect assembly or a severely deteriorated joint that warrants intervention before energisation. Phase-to-phase asymmetry in a three-pole breaker is a strong indicator of a localised defect in the affected phase.
Dynamic Contact Resistance Measurement (DCRM) extends static measurement by recording resistance continuously through the operating stroke as the breaker opens or closes. The resulting resistance-versus-travel curve reveals the condition of the arcing contacts, the contact wipe, the pre-insertion resistor (where fitted) and the interrupter geometry in a way that static measurement cannot. DCRM is particularly valuable for vacuum and SF₆ circuit breakers where the interrupter is sealed and cannot be inspected directly, and for identifying contact erosion that affects the arc extinction capacity of the interrupter without yet significantly changing the closed-circuit resistance.
Circuit breaker timing measures the elapsed time between the initiation of an open or close command and the mechanical separation or closure of the main contacts in each pole. Opening time determines the fault-clearing duty, closing time affects auto-reclose and protection coordination, and arcing time influences contact erosion and equipment life.
Pole synchronism — the difference in contact travel timing between phases — is a critical parameter for three-phase circuit breakers. IEC 62271-100 defines maximum pole-to-pole and same-phase synchronism limits. Excessive synchronism error means that one phase interrupts the arc before the others, creating asymmetric current flow that can produce overvoltages, increase stress on the arcing contacts and affect related protection schemes. Many utilities require pole synchronism within 5 ms for opening and 10 ms for closing — values that can only be confirmed by measurement.
Travel analysis — recording the actual displacement of the contact assembly through the operating stroke using a transducer — identifies whether the mechanism operates within the expected velocity profile, whether there is hesitation, bounce or damping inconsistency, and whether contact overtravel and wipe are within the manufacturer’s specified range. Slow velocity on the opening stroke is a strong indicator of a weak drive spring or worn mechanism linkage that may not prevent operation under normal conditions but can cause failure to interrupt under high-current fault conditions.
Coil performance testing confirms that trip and close coils will function reliably at the minimum voltage likely to be present under substation battery discharge conditions. Minimum trip voltage is typically 70% of rated control voltage for IEC-compliant installations; minimum close voltage is typically 85%. A coil that operates only at or above rated voltage will fail to operate under the reduced voltage conditions that commonly exist during a genuine fault event.
The test scope is adapted to the project requirement and may cover the full diagnostic programme for a commissioned circuit breaker or specific measurements to address a particular concern, maintenance requirement or acceptance criterion.
Testing and interpretation are aligned with the recognised international, European and North American frameworks for high-voltage switchgear and circuit breakers. Where a project specifies a particular framework, APS tests and reports against the standard relevant to the installation, the equipment design and the manufacturer’s guidance.
These services are suitable across the full lifecycle of circuit breakers and associated switchgear, from new commissioning through periodic maintenance to post-fault investigation and end-of-life assessment.
The scope of documentation is agreed with the client at the outset and may form part of a commissioning record, a periodic maintenance file or a standalone diagnostic report.
The objective is to confirm that switching devices operate correctly, clear faults reliably and carry load current without abnormal resistance, overheating or mechanical deterioration. A circuit breaker that passes a visual inspection and operates once on manual command does not demonstrate that it will interrupt a short-circuit fault current within the required time, with all poles closing simultaneously, using a control circuit supplied at the minimum expected battery voltage.
APS identifies timing abnormalities, pole discrepancy, slow mechanism operation, weak trip or close coils, control-circuit deficiencies, high-resistance contacts, deteriorated joints and other defects that can compromise safe operation or protection performance before they cause an in-service failure. The combination of timing, travel, resistance and coil measurements provides a complete picture of the device’s mechanical and electrical condition that no single test can give in isolation.
For maintenance programmes, trending results over successive tests adds diagnostic value beyond any individual set of measurements. A contact resistance value of 150 µΩ where the manufacturer’s limit is 200 µΩ is technically acceptable at face value; if the previous measurement was 80 µΩ, the upward trend identifies a deteriorating contact that warrants attention before it reaches the threshold. APS documents baseline results in a format that supports trend analysis and informed maintenance decisions across the asset lifecycle.
By combining circuit breaker diagnostics, contact resistance measurement, DCRM, functional verification and engineering interpretation aligned with IEC, EN, IEEE and CIGRE practice, APS helps clients reduce failure risk, improve switching-device reliability and demonstrate that critical electrical assets are suitable for energisation or continued service.