May 26, 2008—Fluke Corporation has collaborated with American Trainco to offer a professional training opportunity important for anyone responsible for electrical system installation, maintenance and troubleshooting in commercial and industrial facilities.
The course, Using the Fluke 435 Power Quality Analyzer for Solving Power Quality Problems, will teach attendees what power quality means, why it is critical for successful facility operation, and how to use the Fluke 435 to identify power quality problems, says the company.
Power quality is often overlooked, but estimates put power quality-related losses at more than $80 billion per year in the United States. This course provides the knowledge to manage power quality and delivers hands-on practice using the Fluke 435 3-Phase Power Quality Analyzer.
This course is designed for anyone responsible for electrical system installation, maintenance and troubleshooting in commercial and industrial facilities. Professionals who will benefit from this seminar include plant electricians, facility maintenance personnel, building engineers, plant and facility managers, HVAC technicians and energy management personnel and electrical contractors.
The first day of this seminar will concentrate on teaching the student what power quality is, how it can be monitored, and the effect it can have on equipment and maintenance operations. In the second day, students will apply what they have learned in a hands-on session using the Fluke 435 Logging Power Quality Analyzer on an actual three-phase circuit.
The course will be presented in Los Angeles on June 9-10, in White Plains, N.Y. on June 23-24 and in Philadelphia on June 25-26, 2008.
Tuition for the two-day course (8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. each day) is $985. To register, call 1-877-97-TRAIN, or go to the Fluke Web site.