115 North Sullivan Road
Spokane, Washington, 99037
Students are welcome! Reserve by emailing to omill@ieee.org.
Meet at Ciena Parking Lot at 5:00 PM; the meeting will conclude at 6:00 PM.
May 16, 2012 – Ciena Field Trip
Auxiliary DC Control Power – David Wilson
David L. Wilson of McLaren Inc will present at the IEEE dinner meeting on October 20th, at Conley’s Restaurant.
The most critical component of a protection, control, and monitoring system is the auxiliary DC control power system. Failure of the DC control power can render fault detection devices unable to detect faults, breakers unable to trip for faults, local and remote indication to become inoperable, etc. The auxiliary DC control power system consists of the battery, battery charger, distribution system, switching and protective devices, and any monitoring equipment. Proper sizing, design, and maintenance of the components that make up the auxiliary DC control system are required. Many references for stationary battery system design address only a specific battery technology making it difficult to compare different types of batteries for their overall suitability to substation application. Also, most references do not address the particular requirements of the electrical substation environment and duty cycle. This presentation provides an overall review of things to consider in designing the auxiliary DC control power system for an electrical substation.
David L. Wilson received his B.S. degree from Washington State University in 1978. He has diverse experience in the fields of energy R&D, aerospace, medical and commercial electronics manufacturing and electrical power system and component sales. He is co-owner of McLaren Inc., a manufacturers’ representative firm, with technical sales responsibilities for (15) manufacturers including Storage Battery Systems and Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories Inc. He has (17) years experience selling and advising on utility battery system applications.
Time: Social time will start at 5:30 p.m. and the Dinner will start at 6:30 p.m.
Location: Conley’s Restaurant, 12618 E Sprague Avenue Spokane, Washington
Click Here to Register
Here is the iCal Link; http://meetings.vtools.ieee.org/feed/meeting_ical/8269
2011 Executive
The Spokane Section of the IEEE has elected the Executive for 2011
Chair - Me (Jeff MacKinnon)
Vice-Chair – Manasi Katragadda
Treasurer/Secretary – Nathan Milleville
Membership – Dick Snell
Past-Chair – Olga Mill
What’s in store this year
I will be putting together a plan for this year and anyone that is interested in helping please don’t hesitate to contact me. I will be sure to get back to you ASAP.
I would like this year to be a year of communicate openly with the members of the section. If you have any suggestions, complaints, event ideas please don’t hesitate to email me at jeffery.mackinnon@ieee.org or use the Contact Page.
Engineering Career & Business Practices (ITT Tech)
Presenter: Gene Hamacher, ITT Tech
Topic : “Engineering Career & Business Practices”
Date/Location : Jan 28 (Friday) ; Lab # 1 (ITT Technical Institute, Spokane)
Time : 4:30 PM – pizza ; 5:00 PM – presentation
Gene Hamacher had started his educational path at DeVry in Phoenix where he received his BSEET degree in 1987. Seven years later, Gene attended M.I.T. where he earned two Master’s Degrees – one in Management and the other in Engineering. While at M.I.T., Mr. Hamacher joined the Leaders for Manufacturing Program.
After working 16 years in the US aerospace industry, Gene started teaching at a technical college. He had successfully taught courses in Mathematics, Business, DC electronics and some IT courses. Students came to like Gene for his open enthusiasm, willingness to help, and truly inspiring lectures.
This is a joint meeting with the ITT IEEE Student branch; all students are welcome to attend.
Reserve by emailing to Olga Mill (omill@ieee.org); visitor parking is available (North side of ITT).
Circuit Modeling – Cooper Power Systems
Bruce Meyer of Cooper Power Systems will present at the IEEE meeting on November 17th, at Conley’s Restaurant.
The CYMDIST Distribution System Analysis Program is designed for modeling electric distribution systems under different operating conditions and scenarios. The features and capabilities are many, but include the following:
- Power flow and voltage drop analysis
- Fault flow analysis
- Voltage drop analysis with profiles
- Network planning
- Substation and sub-network modeling and analysis
- Protective device coordination
The new features of CYMDIST include Distributed Generation (DG) Modeling and Transient Stability Analysis among others. With the introduction of co-generation at the sub-transmission and the distribution levels, the transient stability problem is now becoming a concern at the distribution level, and when the penetration level of distributed generation (DG) becomes high enough, the DG units will then start to influence the dynamic behavior of the power system as a whole. In a distribution network, poor stability of DG’s will result in oscillations of the power and the frequency, false tripping of the network protection and adversely affect the quality of supply to the customers. CYMDIST 5.0 extends the modeling and analysis of distributed resources including an indepth modeling to solve transient stability issues.
Bruce Meyer was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan and grew up in Council Bluffs, Iowa. He received his BS in Electrical Engineering from Iowa State University and later his MS in Manufacturing and Management Engineering from University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee. He has worked for ABB as a design engineer, MagneTek as a marketing manager for voltage regulator product, and started with Cooper Power Systems as a Distribution Protection Engineer in 1999. During his tenure at Cooper, he has worked in international marketing for overhead distribution switchgear and domestic marketing for underground switchgear. His latest position is as a Sales Engineer for the Inland Northwest territory.
Time: Social time will start at 5:30 p.m. and the Dinner will start at 6:30 p.m.
Location: Conley’s Restaurant, 12618 E Sprague Avenue Spokane, Washington
Click Here to Register
Here is the iCal Link; http://meetings.vtools.ieee.org/feed/meeting_ical/3617
IEEE Spokane Going Social
In an effort to start and reach a wider audience we have started to update the IEEE Spokane Section’s web prescence. First item on the list was to update the website to make it easier to update and full of relevant information, that I think is almost complete. There are a number of tweaks that I am working on, but it is up, running and working.
Next we have created profiles on different social media sites including Twitter, Linkedin and most recently Facebook. You can follow, join or like us at any of these places and get updates from the section and the website in general. And of course you can add our RSS feed to any of you favorite readers by using this link. The website will remain the “hub” of activity, but we don’t want to miss out on grabbing your attention at your regular online homebase.
Another recent development was using one of the IEEE tools developed by volunteers at vTools called Meetings. With this we can schedule meetings that will automatically be shown on the website, enable us to do registrations, and I think that the best service is the ability for members to add this to their calendar so that they are always up to date on the meeting schedule, as they are scheduled. I will be adding a tutorial on how to do this in a later post, but for those that are knowledged the iCal link is http://meetings.vtools.ieee.org/meetings/ical/0/90/asc/6/SPOKANE
If there are any tools that we can use to grow our base, or you would like to help us by volunteering please feel free to contact me, or come chat at one of our upcoming meetings. I always look forward to seeing new faces.
Cheers,
Jeff M
PS – If you are a young IEEE member who has graduated in that last 10 years, please send me an email at jeffery.mackinnon@ieee.org or comment. I am looking to start a GOLD Chapter in Spokane and need a few more signatures.
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ITT Students Visited Ciena for a Field Trip (May 20, 2010)
Hello, All
Spokane ITT Electronics Bachelor’s students visited Ciena. Normally during these hours they work on calculus problems, but tonight they decided to come and tour the Ciena facility. Randy Douglass, the Chair of the Electronics Department, came along. Randy also teaches electronics, math, calculus and other science-related courses at ITT and has been an IEEE member for many years.
We all had pizza and talked about engineering careers. I have shared my past experiences of how it was when I was looking for a job being right out of school. Students told me that they are working on some exciting electronics projects. Also, ITT is thinking about opening an ITT student IEEE Branch; this is still in works. Randy Douglass is putting a lot of efforts not only in terms of teaching students according to the curriculum, but also shows them what a good engineer would be in a field by providing real life examples. What a great experience for them !
Olga Mill
Chair
Distribution System Analysis (Follow up on Technical Presentation, May 19, 2010)
Hello, All
Yesterday we had a technical presentation and it went really well ! The presenter was Bruce Meyer, Cooper Power Systems. Bruce has worked in international marketing for overhead distribution switchgear and domestic marketing for underground switchgear. His latest position is as a Sales Engineer for the Inland Northwest territory, and he had a lot to share in terms of surge protectors.
There are various ways to protect the lines from the electrical surges, and in some cases surge arresters are the must ! It was fun to listen about the materials and innovation that it took to make a great product. Thank you, Bruce !
The presentation was sponsored by Chuck Frandrup, Director, Construction & Engineering, Pend Oreille County Public Utility District (POPUD) No. 1
The meeting went really well – we had student guests from ITT accompanied by their tireless instructor Randy Douglass .
We also had other guests, and we always welcome guests to join us for dinner meetings.
We always welcome new presenters, so if you come and present for us - then the dinner is on us !
Olga Mill
Chair
Distribution System Analysis Presentation – Cooper Power System
Bruce Meyer of Cooper Power Systems will present at the IEEE meeting on May 19, at Conley’s Restaruant.
Overvoltage protection of distribution systems has changed much since protection was employed. The first widespread use of surge arresters used a gapped structure and Silicon Carbide semiconductor material. These were replaced with straight Metal Oxide Varister (MOV) construction without a gap, and later an MOV with a series internal gap. The latest overvoltage protection builds upon the gapped MOV design with a capacitance layer that leads to the lowest discharge voltages across the arrester, the highest margin of protection, and an infinite temporary overvoltage capability.
Bruce Meyer was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan and grew up in Council Bluffs, Iowa. He received his BS in Electrical Engineering from Iowa State University and later his MS in Manufacturing and Management Engineering from University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee. He has worked for ABB as a design engineer, MagneTek as a marketing manager for voltage regulator product, and started with Cooper Power Systems as a Distribution Protection Engineer in 1999. During his tenure at Cooper, he has worked in international marketing for overhead distribution switchgear and domestic marketing for underground switchgear. His latest position is as a Sales Engineer for the Inland Northwest territory.
Time: Social time will start at 5:30 p.m. and the Dinner will start at 6:30 p.m.
Location: Conley’s Restaruant, 12618 E Sprague Avenue Spokane, Washington
Click Here to add this event to your calendar (iCal).
Region 6 NW Area Meeting (Report)
Location : Airport Ramada, Spokane
Date : May 8, 2010
I just got back from the IEEE NW area meeting that took place in Spokane. This report is just a a highlight of what has been going on during the meeting; I can not possibly cover all the details !
We had participants from Alaska, Seattle, and other areas of NW region who had arrived to Spokane the night before. I was also glad to see some of our Spokane IEEE members attending the meeting.
I must say that the Airport Ramada staff was professional and willing to help prior to the meeting and during the meeting itself. In my opinion, food and conference room accommodations were great!
After a breakfast, the meeting was on its way. An opening statement was made by Joe Decuir, NW Area Chair. Then we had a R6 Director’s report (Leonard Bond), followed by the Director-Elect candidate presentations (Mike Andrews, Gene Stuffle).
There was a discussion about the Section’s Congress which will take place in San Francisco in August of 2011. Visit the Sections Congress site for more information : http://www.ieee.org/societies_communities/geo_activities/sections_congress/index.html
Then the reports from the R6 Committee Chairs followed. The Awards & Advancement Committee (Ocie Mitchell) is asking to be proactive in terms of sending the nominations. There are still some categories where no candidates were nominated. Elizabeth Johnson presented a great report on Women in Engineering, an affinity group ( The WIE site is at http://www.ieee.org/membership_services/membership/women/index.html).
An interesting fact I learned that Women in Engineering is not only about involving exclusively women; they also address critical issues such as being a single parent while working as an engineer – which, in turn, may involve not only working women but also their male colleagues.
Then the Section Brief Reports followed. I have demonstrated our ieeespokane.com site; our publications team had put a lot of efforts into it. It was interesting to hear a Portland Section report and their experience with using the newest technology while conducting the meetings.
After lunch, we had a NW Area Student Paper contest.
Five contestants entered the student paper contest, and I was one of the judges. I would say that we had to judge some strong papers. All contestants had their strengths; I am proud of the work that they did. I think that these kinds of presentations shape our students !
The student contest judges had to select three papers:
First Place - “Seismic analysis of the 2009 eruption of Redoubt Volcano, Alaska using the Hilbert-Huang Transformation.”
Second Place - “Seeing and Interacting with Sound: Oscillo-Tube Science Exhibit”
Third Place - “Class AB Tube Guitar Amplifier”
I also thought that the paper called “Wilderness Research
Station (TWRS) Data Storage System” offered a unique power solution to a remote Idaho ranch. The paper “Evaluation of Transformer Protection” was very well written, in addition the presenter demonstrated excellent presentation skills.
Overall, I think that this meeting was very productive and informative, driven by enthusiasm and energy of Joe Decuir, NW Area Chair, who moderated the meeting and kept the meeting on schedule.






