electrickiwi
Electrical
- Aug 14, 2012
- 14
Greetings,
I'm looking at cable ducting arrangements for a 415 V, 600 kVA generator where the single core power cables feed out through a concrete foundation slab in which the rebar is bonded to the earthing network.
Cables are single-core and connected 2 per phase (carrying around 400 A each).
Rebar is 20mm OD but unfortunately the tight spacing and bend requirements makes it difficult to get a set of 3 conductors through a single rebar "loop".
This is for the UK. Is there any UK-specific guidance as to what minimum current level (rebar size, spacing, conductor size, etc) requires consideration of EM induction and heating??
If I need to go down the route of insulating between rebar joins so as to break the current loop, how is this normally achieved? Is there a specific product for this purpose?
On a related note, the generator comes with a steel terminal enclosure that we would punch individual holes through for the single core cable glands. The comment from the manufacturer was that in only a tiny percentage of cases are they ever asked for a stainless alternative, and that for 400 A per core (800 per phase), they don't deem it necessary to worry about induced heating.
Does that sound reasonable??
Thanks
I'm looking at cable ducting arrangements for a 415 V, 600 kVA generator where the single core power cables feed out through a concrete foundation slab in which the rebar is bonded to the earthing network.
Cables are single-core and connected 2 per phase (carrying around 400 A each).
Rebar is 20mm OD but unfortunately the tight spacing and bend requirements makes it difficult to get a set of 3 conductors through a single rebar "loop".
This is for the UK. Is there any UK-specific guidance as to what minimum current level (rebar size, spacing, conductor size, etc) requires consideration of EM induction and heating??
If I need to go down the route of insulating between rebar joins so as to break the current loop, how is this normally achieved? Is there a specific product for this purpose?
On a related note, the generator comes with a steel terminal enclosure that we would punch individual holes through for the single core cable glands. The comment from the manufacturer was that in only a tiny percentage of cases are they ever asked for a stainless alternative, and that for 400 A per core (800 per phase), they don't deem it necessary to worry about induced heating.
Does that sound reasonable??
Thanks