Fauske & Associates provides critical support to nuclear equipment manufacturers and suppliers, OEMs and utilities with a range of services and testing designed to qualify equipment, parts and components for many applications. These include both mild and harsh nuclear and chemical environments to meet NRC guidelines and industry and plant-specific requirements. Our testing capabilities are also applicable to non-nuclear equipment.




The equipment to be tested is mounted in a plant typical arrangement to the table. Before any testing, the equipment should be checked for functionality. Once the functionality is assured, either a sine sweep resonance search or a multi frequency random noise excitation is conducted to detect the natural frequencies of the equipment. This is also done to demonstrate that the mounting configuration is sufficiently rigid. For that activity the equipment is typically instrumented with a sufficient number of accelerometers. The equipment will then undergo five (5) Operating Basis Earthquake (OBE) and finally one (1) Safe Shutdown Earthquake (SSE) profiles. The Required Response Spectra (RRS) for these tests constitute a requirement to be met by the shake table time history motion. The RRS are predetermined by analysis and entered into the controller of the seismic table. They depend on various factors such as the location, the building and the bedrock. During the test, the accelerometers are used to record the Test Response Spectra (TRS). The TRS must exceed or envelope the RRS, which is typically shown by overlaid plots. The equipment shall be in operational mode during the tests and monitored for performance. A post test functionality check shall also be performed. If the equipment performs well, is free of material failures, structurally intact and the TRS exceeded the requirement, then the equipment can be classified as Class 1E. Figure 2 is a photograph of a component that was tested on a seismic shake table.