Richmond County Daily Journal
Nov 09, 2012 | 9521 views | 0

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Contributed photo
Students in the second year of studies in the Electric Utility Substation and Relay Technology (EUSRT) program at Richmond Community College in Hamlet had the unique experience this week of reassembling a 230,000 volt circuit breaker that was operational three weeks ago at the Sharron Harris nuclear plant in Raleigh. EUSRT instructor Steve Lampley (foreground) oversees the installation at the RCC substation training site. Rather than scrap a piece of functional equipment when it was replaced with newer technology, Duke Energy donated the circuit breaker to the college for student training purposes.
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Contributed photo
Students in the second year of studies in the Electric Utility Substation and Relay Technology (EUSRT) program at Richmond Community College in Hamlet had the unique experience this week of reassembling a 230,000 volt circuit breaker that was operational three weeks ago at the Sharron Harris nuclear plant in Raleigh. EUSRT instructor Steve Lampley (foreground) oversees the installation at the RCC substation training site. Rather than scrap a piece of functional equipment when it was replaced with newer technology, Duke Energy donated the circuit breaker to the college for student training purposes.