Morning Report for January 4, 1999
Headquarters Daily Report JANUARY 04, 1999 *************************************************************************** REPORT NEGATIVE NO INPUT ATTACHED INPUT RECEIVED RECEIVED HEADQUARTERS X REGION I X REGION II X REGION III X REGION IV X PRIORITY ATTENTION REQUIRED MORNING REPORT - REGION IV JANUARY 4, 1999 Licensee/Facility: Notification: Texas Utilities Electric Co. MR Number: 4-99-0001 Comanche Peak 2 Date: 01/04/99 Glen Rose,Texas Resident Inspector Dockets: 50-446 PWR/W-4-LP Subject: MANUAL TRIP OF UNIT 2 FOLLOWING A MAIN TURBINE CONTROL FAILURE Discussion: This morning report provides additional information not contained in the January 3, 1999, Event Notification (EN#35213). At approximately 11:14a.m. (CST) on January 3,1999, the Comanche Peak Steam Electric Station, Unit 2, main turbine generator control valves suddenly and unexpectedly closed while at 100 percent rated power. As designed, all steam dumps immediately opened and rods automatically stepped in to control the reactor coolant system temperature transient. The reactor plant, designed to withstand a 50 percent load rejection, experienced an equivalent 80 percent load rejection event. Shortly after the control valves had closed (approximately 5 seconds), the main turbine control system began operating as if it had been transferred to the speed control mode by controlling main generator output to 200 MWe. The main turbine generator speed control mode resulted in the control valves cycling between the fully closed position to 3 percent open every few seconds. About 9 seconds into the event, one pressurizer power-operated relief valve opened for approximately 5 seconds to control the resultant reactor coolant system pressure increase. The pressurizer relief tank blowout disc remained intact. As pressurizer level oscillated from the cyclic operation of the control valves, reactor coolant system pressure continued to slowly decrease. Pressurizer heaters, Groups B and D, failed to automatically energize as designed. After approximately one minute, operators manually tripped Unit 2. The auxiliary feedwater system automatically started when steam generator levels dropped following the manual trip. Other than one redundant auxiliary feedwater flow instrument failure, everything operated as expected during the trip. The unit was stabilized in Mode 3, Hot Standby. Prior to defining the restart schedule, the licensee plans to determine the cause of the main turbine control system failure; implement commitments made to the NRC regarding issues found during their review of NRC Generic Letter 96-01, "Testing of Safety-Related Logic Circuits;" and complete repairs to the pressurizer backup heaters, the auxiliary feedwater flow instrument, and several other minor failures which occurred during the transients. Regional Action: The resident inspectors are monitoring the licensee's troubleshooting and recovery efforts. Contact: Joe Tapia (817)860-8243 Anthony T. Gody (254)891-1500 _
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