Chapter Two
Chapter Two
ECEg4241
Chapter Two
Lecture 1:
Wiring materials, Accessories, and methods
Instructor:
G/Tsadik Teklay
Assistant Professor in Electrical Power
Engineering, Adigrat University
E-mail: [email protected]
Tel: +251 972 08 55 53
Office location: Block 60, Room 27
Introduction
• Materials for wiring interior electrical systems
in buildings vary depending on:
Intended use and amount of power demand on
the circuit
Type of occupancy and size of the building
National and local regulations
Environment in which the wiring must operate.
Cont’d
Wiring systems in a single family home or flat, for example,
are simple, with relatively low power requirements.
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Parts of Cable…Cont’d
Metallic Sheath:
As the cable is placed underground, soil may present, moisture, gases, and
some other liquids. Therefore to protect the cable metallic sheath made up of
lead or aluminum is provided over the insulation.
This provides the mechanical protection but mainly restricts moisture and
other gases to reach to the insulation.
Bedding: The metallic sheath is covered by another layer called bedding.
The bedding consists of paper tape compounded with a fibrous material like
jute strands or hessian tape.
The purpose of bedding is to protect the metallic sheath from corrosion and
from mechanical injury resulting due to armouring.
Armoring:
• This layer consists of one or two layers of galvanized steel wire or
steel tapes which provide protection to the cable from the
mechanical injury.
Serving:
• The last layer above the armouring is serving. It is a layer of fibrous
material like jute cloth which protects the armouring from the
atmospheric conditions.
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Early wires and cables
• Trunking Systems
– Cable Tray, Cable Basket and Cable Ladder
Conduit Systems
• The commonest method of installing
cables is to draw them into a conduit.
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Types of conduit
1. Metal conduit (rigid galvanized steel or Black
Enameled Steel conduit),see Fig.1.
2. Non-metallic (PVC ) tubing (piping), see Fig.2.
3. Rectangular cross-section metal or PVC wire or
trunking (UK) may be used if many circuits are
required, see Fig.3.
Cont’d
Cont’d
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Cont’d
• PVC trunking
– The main areas in
which PVC trunking is
used are domestic
and office premises.
• Metal trunking
– Metal trunking is PVC Surface Trunking for an office
used extensively in
engineering premises.
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100 x 100 mm steel trunking
Bus-bar Trunking
• There are two main types of bus-
bar trunking, the overhead type of
bus-bar used for distribution in
industrial premises and rising-main
trunking
• Overhead bus-bar trunking is ideal
for distribution in factories.
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Cable trays
• Wiring in exposed areas, for example factory floors, may be run in
cable trays or rectangular raceways having lids.
• Cable trays are used in industrial areas where many insulated cables
are run together.
• Individual cables can exit the tray at any point, simplifying the wiring
installation and reducing the labour cost for installing new cables.
Power cables may have fittings in the tray to maintain clearance
between the conductors, but small control wiring is often installed
without any intentional spacing between cables.
• Since wires run in conduits or underground cannot dissipate heat as
easily as in open air, and since adjacent circuits contribute induced
currents, wiring regulations give rules to establish the current
capacity (ampacity).
• Special sealed fittings are used for wiring routed through potentially
explosive atmospheres.
Cable tray…Cont’d
• Traywork is another method of supporting several cables
along a run.
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Bus bars, bus duct, cable bus and
cables
• Bus bar
– For very heavy currents in electrical apparatus, and for heavy
currents distributed through a building, bus bars can be used.
– Each live conductor of such a system is a rigid piece of copper or
aluminium, usually in flat bars.
– In industrial applications, conductor bars are often pre-assembled
with insulators in grounded enclosures. This assembly, known as
bus duct or busway, can be used for connections to large
switchgear or for bringing the main power feed into a building.
– A form of bus duct known as "plugin bus" is used to distribute
power down the length of a building; it is constructed to allow tap-
off switches or motor controllers to be installed at designated
places along the bus. The big advantage of this scheme is the
ability to remove or add a branch circuit without removing voltage
from the whole duct.
Cont’d
Cont’d
UK
Cont’d
This is the amount of space that can be used. When calculating how
many cables can be installed in the trunking, it is important to take into
account the insulation around the cable as this counts as used space.
Cont’d