hewl35
Electrical
- Dec 4, 2002
- 4
I work for a large midwest medical university we have almost all of our high voltage inside in a some what climate controlled enviroment (basement) with no sun exposure supported by cable trays. The cable is all copper three conductor, 15KV (running at 13.8 KV)IAC amoured cable, 133% insulation, shielded cable that is anywhere from 1 year to 30 years old. The wire sizing for the most part is mixture of mcm350 and mcm500. We have eight feeders running less than 100 amps each. Seeing as how we are hardly straining the cable during normal use when we hy-pot the cabling after working it we only go to 18 KV to prevent a blowout. As the facility gets older we are seeing more and more blips, dips, etc and are wondering how much of this is a cabling problem. Certain parts of the facility is heavy into research and need to have a zero probablity of failure. The question came up is what exactly is the life span of the cabling? Where is your comfort factor? Thanks