Quick Sizing & Sourcing Snapshot
- Manufacturer: GE (General Electric)
- Part Number: IS200EACFG2B
- System Platform: EX2100 / EX2100e Excitation Control (Mark VI/VIe)
- Hardware Type: Exciter AC Feedback Board (EACF)
- Architectural Role: Conditions and fans out Generator PPT (Voltage) and Air Core CT (Current) signals to the M1, M2, and C controllers via DB9 links in a TMR setup.
- Key Specifications: 1000V RMS Input Rating (G2), 3x DB9 Outputs, Blind Board (No LEDs), TMR Compatible.
System Architecture & Operational Principle
The is a passive signal-conditioning hub located in the Exciter Auxiliary Cabinet. It is the “G2” variant in the EACF family, designed for systems with medium-high PPT secondary voltages (rated 1000V RMS nominal, +20% transient tolerance).
Physically, it mounts to the cabinet framework (chassis mount). Upstream, it receives raw 3-phase AC from Generator Potential Transformers (PPTs) and signals from Air Core Current Transformers (CTs) at its screw terminals (TB1-TB3 for PPT, TB4 for CT). The board uses internal step-down transformers (T1-T4, typically T2/T3 active) to isolate and scale these signals. Downstream, it has no active processing; it “fans out” the conditioned signals via three 9-pin D-Sub (DB9) connectors (J504 to M1, J509 to M2, J514 to C). This allows the three TMR (Triple Modular Redundant) controllers on the EBKP backplane to independently vote on AC feedback for the AVR (Automatic Voltage Regulator) loop. It operates at Level 1/2, providing the sensory interface required to regulate generator terminal voltage and VARs.
Core Technical Specifications
- Voltage Rating (G2): 1000V RMS (Nominal +20% Transient Tolerance)
- Current Inputs: Air Core CT (0 to 0.8V RMS), 2 Terminals (TB4)
- Voltage Inputs: 3-Phase PPT (L1, L2, L3), Terminals TB1, TB2, TB3
- Output Interfaces: 3x DB9 (D-Sub) -> J504 (M1), J509 (M2), J514 (C)
- Transformers: T1, T2, T3, T4 (Signal Scaling & Galvanic Isolation)
- Test Points: TP1-TP4 (Phase-to-Phase: AB, BC, CA @ Scaled ~1.6V)
- Power: Passive (No Active Consumption; Signal Sourced from PT/CT)
- Indicators: None (Blind Board; Diagnostics via Controller/EBKP)
- Coating: Conformal Coated (Revision B)
- Mounting: Chassis Mount (Exciter Auxiliary Cabinet Framework)
- Max Cable Length: Up to 90m (300ft) to EBKP
Customer Value & Operational Benefits
Medium-High Voltage Isolation (G2 Rating)
The “G2” (1000V RMS) rating is the sweet spot for many large gen-sets (e.g., 13.8kV:120V systems where transients can spike). Using a G1 (480V) here risks transformer insulation breakdown during faults. Using G3 (1400V) works but yields slightly lower signal resolution at 120V nominal. The G2 protects the M1/M2/C controllers (EBKP) from transients while optimizing the AVR loop stability.
TMR Signal Isolation
By fanning out via dedicated DB9s to M1, M2, and C, the board ensures galvanic separation of the redundant paths at the sensor level. If a fault (e.g., lightning surge) spikes the PPT wiring and cooks the T2 transformer on thisboard, it won’t propagate to the M1 processor’s ADC. The M2 and C paths remain viable for the 2oo3 vote, preventing a spurious “Volts Loss” trip during a grid disturbance.
Centralized Calibration Access
The TP1-TP4 test points provide scaled AC voltage (approx 1.6V AC for 120V PT secondary). You can verify PPT phasing and scaling with a DMM right at the board while synchronized at 100% load, without probing live high-voltage bushings. This speeds up AVR tuning and “Volts Mismatch” diagnostics.
Field Engineer’s Notes (From the Trenches)
This board is a “Black Box”—zero LEDs. When the AVR starts hunting (VAR oscillation), don’t just swap the M1 controller. Grab a Fluke 115.
Check TP1 to TP2 (Phase A-B). You should see ~1.6V AC (scaled). If TP1-2 reads 0V but your PPT cabinet reads 120V AC, the T2 transformer on the EACFG2B is open (likely cooked by a past surge on the grid).
Critical on Shielding: The DB9 cables (J504 etc.) have shield drains. The ground lug is on the EACF metal chassis, within 3 inches of TB1. Land the shield drain there, not at a distant cabinet ground bar. Running the shield 10 feet to a remote bus creates a ground loop; 60Hz hum injects into your AC feedback, causing the generator to “hunt” (oscillate VARs) under heavy load swings.
Torque those terminals: TB1-TB3 are PPT inputs. A loose L2 connection causes “Phase Imbalance” or “Volts Mismatch” in the TMR vote. Use a 0.5-0.6 Nm driver; exciter fan vibration loosens standard screws over a year.
Real-World Applications
- 500MW Steam Turbine Generator (13.8kV): The EACFG2B handles PPT secondaries (~120V AC nominal), spiking to 130V+ during faults. It scales and isolates these for M1, M2, C controllers managing the static exciter’s AVR loop.
- Frame 7FA Gas Turbine: Terminating Air Core CT signals (DC Field Current as AC). The G2 rating handles electrical noise from 6-pulse thyristor bridge switching, preventing spurious “Field Over Current” trips during transient loading.
High-Frequency Troubleshooting FAQ
Q: ToolboxST shows “Voltage Feedback Loss” or “PPT Signal Invalid” on M1 only. EACFG2B looks fine. Where’s the fault?
A: The EACF fans out to all three. If only M1 complains, the issue is the DB9 Cable (J504) or the M1’s EBKP receiver, not the EACF board itself. Wiggle the thumbscrews on J504; vibration loosens these. If tight, ohm the 9-pin cable (Pin 2-3, 4-5, 6-7 for phases). A broken pin 3 kills the A-B voltage signal to M1.
A: Electrically risky. Pinouts are identical, and it will “work” at 120V nominal. However, the G1’s transformer insulation is rated for lower peak transients. If a lightning strike or switching surge hits the grid, the G1’s T2/T3 may arc internally, potentially propagating voltage to the EBKP backplane and frying the M1/M2/C processors. In production, use the specified G2B.
Q: TP1-TP2 reads 0V AC, but PPT secondaries are live at the terminal block. Is the board trash?
A: Likely, yes. Check for a blown fuse (if equipped on specific sub-revs) near T2. If the fuse is good, the T2 transformer winding is open (cooked from a past surge). The EACF is passive; if input power is verified at TB1/TB2 but test points are dead, the board took the hit. Verify no shorts on the PPT field wiring (L1-L2 short) before installing the replacement, or you’ll blow the new T2 in seconds.
Please note: The listed price is not the actual final price. It is for reference only and is subject to appropriate negotiation based on current market conditions, quantity, and availability.







