Hermosa
Beach, CA - E&S Grounding Solutions
today announced the capital acquisition
of $36,000.00 worth of engineering software
from Safe Engineering Services & technologies
ltd. in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The
new software called “MultiFields” solves
electromagnetic problems such as lightning
transients, switching surges, and high-frequency
disturbances on power system networks. This
software is additionally able to calculate
electromagnetic interference on pipelines
and communication lines, including the
inductive, capacitive, and conductive effects.
With the new capacity the software brings,
E&S Grounding Solutions is now offering
Lightning Transient Analysis and above-grade
Ground Potential Rise (GPR) services for
high-frequency and multi-frequency applications. “This
new software takes E&S Grounding into
an entirely new arena in the engineering
world.” said Michael Esparza, President
of E&S Grounding Solutions. “We
are now offering world-class services to
the biggest engineering firms in the world.”
Mr. Esparza beamed with excitement as
he said, “We have some serious talent
on staff. Our Chief Scientist is
an Electrical Engineer with a PhD in Material
Science, and our Chief Engineer has his
P.E. and a Masters in Engineering. Combine
this talent with the years of experience
that our other engineers and staff members
have along with this new software, and
E&S Grounding Solutions can provide
an amazing array of high technology services.”
The MultiFields package consists of three
modules, HIFREQ, MALZ, & FFTSES and is
part of the world renowned CDEGS Engineering
Software developed by Safe Engineering Services
in Canada. CDEGS is the most powerful
engineering software package ever developed
for electrical engineers in the power quality
field. It is the software of choice
for designing substations and transmission
lines by power companies the world over.
No other software has been approved more
often or is more accepted in the industry
than the CDEGS software package. It has
become so well validated and so widely accepted
that it was even used to develop the IEEE
standards used in substation safety. |