System Overview and Maintenance Background
GE SPEEDTRONIC ™ The Mark VI turbine control system is an integrated control platform developed by GE based on over 30 years of turbine control experience, widely used for control, protection, and monitoring of gas turbines and steam turbines. Mark VI adopts a distributed processor architecture and supports two configurations: Simplex and TMR (Triple Modular Redundancy), with high availability and fault tolerance.
In actual operation, the control system may trigger alarms or shutdowns due to aging I/O cards, communication abnormalities, power fluctuations, sensor failures, and other issues. This article is based on the typical structure of the Mark VI system, summarizing common fault phenomena, diagnostic processes, and maintenance strategies to help on-site engineers respond quickly and reduce unplanned downtime.
System core architecture and redundancy mechanism
2.1 Control module and VME backplane
The core of Mark VI is the Control Module, which uses standard VME racks (13 or 21 slots). The main processor card (occupying 2 slots) executes application software and supports frame rates of 10ms, 20ms, and 40ms. The I/O card is equipped with a TMS320C32 DSP processor for data filtering and floating-point conversion. The data interacts with the VCMI communication card through the VME bus.
Fault prompt: If there is a periodic data refresh delay in the system, priority should be given to checking whether the VME backplane connection is loose and confirming whether the main processor card load is too high.
2.2 TMR Redundant Architecture
The TMR system consists of three independent control modules, power supply, and IONet network, using SIFT (Software Implemented Fault Tolerance) software voting mechanism. The input signal is voted in the software, and the output uses a 3-coil servo valve or 2/3 relay logic. TMR supports online replacement of single point of failure, significantly improving system availability.
Maintenance strategy: When replacing faulty cards in the TMR system, it is necessary to first confirm that the module where the faulty card is located has been "isolated" to avoid triggering cross tripping by mistake.
Troubleshooting of I/O interface and universal card components
3.1 Discrete and Analog I/O
VCRC card: 48 point DI/24 point DO, compatible with TBC1, DTC1 and other terminal boards. The typical fault is that the input point has no state change, and the common reasons are external dry contact oxidation or optocoupler damage.
VAIC card: 20 channels of AI/4 channels of AO. If the reading of a certain channel jumps, it is recommended to check whether the grounding is good and use a signal generator to verify the linearity of the channel.
VTCC/VRTD card: thermocouple and RTD inputs. If the temperature display is abnormal, the sensor disconnection or grounding problem should be ruled out first, and then the jumper settings on the terminal board TBTC/TRTD should be checked for correctness.
3.2 Vibration Monitoring (VVIB Card)
The VVIB card supports seismic probes, Proximitors, Velomitors, and accelerometer inputs. There are a total of 16 vibration channels, 8 axial displacement channels, and 2 Keyphasor channels. If a certain vibration value continues to be high, check whether the probe gap voltage is within the nominal range (-24Vdc power supply limited current protection).
On site experience: When the speed exceeds 3000rpm, the sampling rate of the VVIB processor needs to be adjusted, which may cause the number of available channels to decrease from 16 to 8. After replacing the probe, recalibration is required.

Special card malfunction and handling
4.1 VTUR card: speed, synchronization, and trip interface
The VTUR card provides 4 speed inputs (2-14kHz), 2 PT synchronous inputs, and a trip relay interface. Common faults:
Loss of speed signal: Check the gap between the magnetic sensor (recommended 0.5-1.0mm) and the grounding of the cable shield.
Synchronization failure: Confirm if the PT input voltage on the TTUR terminal board is normal, and check the action logic of K25P and K25A relays.
4.2 VSVO card: servo valve control
VSVO card provides 4 servo channels, supporting LVDT/LVDR feedback and pulse input (flow meter). Three coil servo valves are commonly used in TMR systems.
Fault symptoms: Valve shaking, slow response, or inability to operate.
Diagnostic steps:
Check if the Status LED on the front panel of the VSVO card is yellow (hardware alarm).
Check if the LVDT feedback values are consistent in the software maintenance tool (it is recommended to use at least 2 LVDTs).
Measure whether the resistance of the servo valve coil matches the nominal value (see Table 7: e.g. coil # 1 1000 Ω± 10mA).
4.3 VGEN Card: Generator Interface with PLU/EVA
VGEN card is used for three-phase PT/CT monitoring, power load imbalance (PLU), and early valve action (EVA). The common alarms are "PT disconnection" or "CT saturation".
Suggested solution: Check the fuse and wiring on the TGEN terminal board to confirm that the PT secondary voltage is normal. If it is an EX2000 system, abnormal network communication may also cause VGEN data to be invalid.