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Splicing Shielded MV Cable to Non-Shielded MV Cable

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kmh1

Electrical
Sep 12, 2003
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CA
I have a situation where we need to splice a length of shielded 8kV rated cable to non-shielded 5 kV cable for a failure repair on a 4160 volt system. Does anyone know if the 8kv cable can be treated similarly to the unshielded cable within the splice or will excessive voltage stresses be present without properly terminating the shielded cable conductors? The cable and splice kit manufacturers do not have information available to address this situation.
 
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If this is anything but a very temporary fix, you need to properly terminate the shielded cable. Otherwise it will fail as you say, because of the high voltage stress at the end of the shield. Also, a proper termination is needed to seal out moisture. Then you can connect to the unshielded cable.
 
You definitely need the correct pothead and other temination devices at the end of the shielded cable - you then continue the short distance with unshielded cable.

Is there any reason for using 8 KV cable on 4,160 volts? 5 KV 3 conductor metal clad cable that has only the sheath as an overall shield works quite fine on 4,800 volts ungrounded.
 
Existing cable is 600 MCM. Local electrical inspector has demanded that ampacity of spliced section be the same as existing cable. 600 MCM is only immediately available as 8 kV shielded.
 
Why don't you use 2 conductors in parallel for each phase? This could use more readily available and compatible unshielded cable. You will need 2 conduits for the short section.
 
In addition to the issues already mentioned, you need to remember this will present some safety related issues also. Without proper grounding of the 8kV cable shield, it will act as a capacitor and maintain a dangagerous voltage even when the cable is de-energized.

 
Cable is Teck 90 armoured so integrity of armour sheath wold be maintained over splice location eliminating exposure to voltage on unterminated conductor shield.
 
If the shield is not grounded, the inner jacket will have to withstand some significant portion of the line-to-ground voltage, for which it would not typically be designed.

Also, most codes require the shield to be grounded regardless of presence of armour jacket.
 
The Canadian Electrical Code only requires the shield to be grounded in one location as a minimum which it would be at the cable termination.
 
Shielding isn't required for cables up to 5kV under the Canadian Electrical Code if it is permanent and installed in totally enclosed dry metal raceway or is metal armored cable.
 
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