United Kingdom
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UK Registered Office
Gretna, Dumfriesshire
Scotland
DG16 5DP
APS provides specialist SAT, protection commissioning and end-to-end scheme verification for MV, HV and EHV substations and grid connection points, confirming that protection, control, communication interfaces and associated primary plant operate correctly as an integrated system before energisation.
Specialist SAT, protection commissioning and GPS-synchronised end-to-end scheme verification for MV, HV and EHV substations and grid connection points — providing the traceable technical evidence required for safe energisation, client acceptance and network operator approval.
Protection systems are rarely misapplied because of a relay hardware failure alone. In practice, protection misoperations are most often caused by incorrect settings, interface mismatches, wiring errors, CT or VT polarity problems, communication faults, trip-circuit defects, incomplete interlocking or changes that survive individual device testing but only become visible when the complete scheme is tested as a system under installed site conditions.
Factory Acceptance Testing confirms that equipment and panels meet the specified requirements before delivery. Site Acceptance Testing confirms that the installed equipment, wiring, interfaces and functional logic perform correctly on site. Protection commissioning then verifies that the complete protection and control scheme is ready for safe service. These three stages are distinct and complementary — passing a FAT does not substitute for a proper SAT and protection commissioning programme.
APS focuses on this critical system-level stage. The service verifies that protection settings, current and voltage signals, tripping paths, interlocking logic, communication links, alarms, indications and breaker responses all operate correctly as an integrated system before the substation or grid connection is energised. For line protection schemes, GPS-synchronised end-to-end testing allows realistic fault conditions to be applied simultaneously at both terminals, confirming that both ends of the protected circuit operate coherently before the circuit is placed into service.
Test results are interpreted against design schematics, protection settings, approved drawings, functional descriptions and acceptance limits. The objective is a clear technical position supported by traceable test evidence — not simply a collection of recorded values — giving clients, contractors and network operators documented confidence that the protection system will operate correctly, selectively, dependably and securely from the first day of energisation.
Factory Acceptance Testing, Site Acceptance Testing and protection commissioning are three distinct and complementary stages. Each confirms different things and none substitutes for another. A clear understanding of what each stage does — and does not — verify is important for planning an effective commissioning and acceptance programme.
Factory Acceptance Testing (FAT) confirms that individual equipment items and panels meet the specified functional requirements in a controlled factory environment. Relay settings can be loaded and tested, panel wiring can be checked, and communications interfaces can be verified against the engineering specification. FAT evidence provides confidence that the equipment is correctly built and configured before it leaves the factory. It does not confirm that the equipment will behave correctly once installed, wired to the site CT and VT secondaries, connected to the substation auxiliary supplies, interfaced with other equipment on site, or integrated into the protection scheme as a system.
Site Acceptance Testing (SAT) confirms that the installed equipment, wiring, interfaces and functional logic perform correctly under site conditions. SAT covers checks that can only be completed on site — verification against as-installed wiring, confirmation of correct auxiliary supply connections, insulation testing of installed circuits, and functional checks through the installed current and voltage transformer circuits. SAT is particularly important where equipment has been transported, handled on site, installed in a substation environment, or modified after factory testing.
Protection Commissioning verifies the complete protection and control scheme — not individual relays or panels in isolation, but the whole system including CT and VT secondary signals, settings, trip circuits, interlocks, communication channels, alarms, indications and breaker responses. It provides the final confirmation, before energisation, that the scheme will operate correctly, selectively, dependably and securely in service.
APS can support any or all three stages, acting as principal tester, independent witness or technical reviewer depending on the project structure. For projects where a contractor carries out FAT and SAT activities, APS can provide independent oversight, hold-point witnessing and technical sign-off before energisation is approved.
The test scope is adapted to the project requirements and may cover the full protection and control scheme or specific aspects where independent verification is required. Services span pre-energisation acceptance, protection commissioning, end-to-end scheme testing and functional interface verification.
End-to-end testing verifies that a line protection scheme operates correctly as a complete system by testing both ends of the protected circuit simultaneously. The method is the definitive pre-energisation check for line protection schemes because it is the only approach that confirms the coordinated behaviour of protection equipment at both terminals under realistic fault conditions — before the circuit is placed into service.
For schemes where correct operation depends on signalling or communication between the two ends — line differential protection, distance protection with permissive or blocking teleprotection, intertripping schemes and unit protection — individual relay testing at each end cannot confirm that the scheme will operate correctly as a whole. End-to-end testing does, because it exercises the complete signal path: CT and VT secondaries, relay inputs, relay logic, communication channels, teleprotection signalling, relay outputs, trip circuits and circuit-breaker trip responses at both terminals.
GPS-synchronised injection uses precision GPS timing to apply test voltages and currents simultaneously at both terminals from independent test sets. Because the injection at each end is phase-aligned and time-stamped with GPS accuracy, it is possible to reproduce realistic internal and external fault scenarios — including through-fault stability tests, zone boundary cases and evolving fault conditions — that would otherwise be impossible to verify without the circuit being live.
The test programme typically covers: operation under simulated faults within the protected zone, stability under through faults outside the zone, correct discrimination between zones for distance protection, channel timing and signalling for teleprotection schemes, and coherent operation of auto-reclose sequences where applicable. Results are recorded with GPS timestamps and relay event data, providing a complete and traceable end-to-end test record that supports energisation approval and acceptance sign-off.
For IEC 61850 schemes using GOOSE-based protection, end-to-end testing also verifies virtual wiring, multicast GOOSE logic and communication performance across the substation LAN and inter-substation WAN where applicable.
Testing is carried out in line with recognised standards, good engineering practice and project-specific requirements.
The service is suitable for any project requiring independent, structured commissioning and acceptance evidence for protection and control schemes, from individual feeder protection to complex multi-terminal and busbar schemes at transmission voltage.
The scope of documentation is agreed with the client at the outset and adapted to meet project, network operator or asset-management requirements.
A protection scheme is only as reliable as its weakest interface. Testing an individual relay does not prove that the full protection system will operate correctly in service. The complete scheme depends on correct CT and VT inputs, correct settings, correct logic, healthy trip circuits, functional interlocks, reliable communication channels, correct breaker response and accurate indication to operators. Any one of these elements can fail without triggering an alarm during normal operation, and each is a potential source of a delayed, incorrect or absent trip under fault conditions.
By testing the system as an integrated whole, APS helps identify latent defects that may not be found during standalone equipment testing. These may include swapped CT polarity, incorrect VT phasing, crossed trip wiring, wrong relay logic, incomplete interlocking, incorrect teleprotection signalling, disabled protection functions, incorrect SCADA indication or a communications delay that reduces scheme dependability or security. These defects are typically straightforward to correct when found during commissioning and can be very difficult to manage once the circuit is in service.
End-to-end testing is particularly important for line protection schemes because correct operation depends on the coordinated behaviour of equipment at both ends of the protected circuit. GPS-synchronised injection allows realistic fault scenarios to be applied simultaneously at both terminals, enabling the operation, stability, discrimination and selectivity of the complete scheme to be verified before the circuit is energised. This is the only reliable method of confirming that the scheme will operate correctly for faults within the protected zone and remain stable for faults outside it.
APS provides the traceable technical evidence required for safe energisation, client acceptance and network operator approval — giving all parties documented confidence that the protection and control system will operate correctly, selectively, dependably and securely from the first day of energisation.