The Central African Republic faces significant challenges in power distribution due to its humid tropical climate and underdeveloped grid infrastructure. High humidity and temperature fluctuations often lead to accelerated insulation degradation in transformers, making the use of a current generator machine essential for simulating load conditions and testing system resilience.
Currently, many local utility providers rely on reactive maintenance, which leads to prolonged blackouts. There is an urgent transition toward predictive diagnostics, where the implementation of hipot test leakage current protocols is becoming standard to prevent catastrophic failure in high-voltage equipment before they occur.
Furthermore, the oil-filled transformers used in mining and urban centers in Bangui are prone to overheating. Accurate hipot leakage current measurement is critical for verifying the integrity of aging assets, ensuring that the limited energy resources are managed with maximum safety and minimal waste.




