a10jp
Electrical
- May 18, 2005
- 150
I have triplex cable (3 cables intertwined together) with overlal diameter = 62mm. During pulling, because of the cable run of 350m, we decided to split it ionto 2 pulls from somewhere at midpoint. The trouble is, I failed to account for the manhole at midpoint, and when the cable is inserted through the 600mm dia, the cable min bending radius was exceeded. The cable appears to pass the inuslation resistance tests, and we will soon be doing the hipot. Referring this issue to the manufacturer, they said that they do not have data to show the physical condition of the cable with this level of bending, and cannot guarantee operation after energization. (Think this is a manufacturer warranty statement based upon the condition of the factory testing.)
We take samples of the cables, bend it, straighten it, and then strip open the insulation and examine the condition, and found there was no problem. The cable pass the insulation resistance test, as stated before. And because we are doing a DC-hipot test, many have said DC test will not show failure caused by the excessive bending, even though it shows no physical problem through the peel test on the sample we took. The concern is once the cable is energized, the insulation will swell, and then shrink, and over time, where the cable is bent, problem will develop, and this is not someting visible through peel test before it was energized.
Becasue we bent the cable, the manufacturer recommends to cut the portion that was bent and terminate it with a splice to be safe. My question is, is there any other test, that can be reasonably performed to demonstrate this cable will be ok? Splicing seems a little drastic. What will be other's opinion on this?
We take samples of the cables, bend it, straighten it, and then strip open the insulation and examine the condition, and found there was no problem. The cable pass the insulation resistance test, as stated before. And because we are doing a DC-hipot test, many have said DC test will not show failure caused by the excessive bending, even though it shows no physical problem through the peel test on the sample we took. The concern is once the cable is energized, the insulation will swell, and then shrink, and over time, where the cable is bent, problem will develop, and this is not someting visible through peel test before it was energized.
Becasue we bent the cable, the manufacturer recommends to cut the portion that was bent and terminate it with a splice to be safe. My question is, is there any other test, that can be reasonably performed to demonstrate this cable will be ok? Splicing seems a little drastic. What will be other's opinion on this?