biglee82
Electrical
- Jul 10, 2009
- 3
Hi all
I've had the following put to me and can find no reference in relevant parts of BS EN 60079 (elec apparatus for explosive environments) nor a previous standard BS 5345 (selection, installation and maintenance of ...)
We apply a rule of thumb of 4A per mm2 for cables running through potentially contaminated land, which apparently comes from an old pipeline operators code of practice and is recommended to keep temperature cables low. It is also applied to terminals in the hazardous area. Also worth noting is it is associated with Increased Safety Exe equipment.
This therfore causes an issue when re-using cables but replacing the protection and load. The cable in question here is a supply to a lighting column. We have replaced the fittings and fitted an Exe isolator at the column and installed a 10A Type C breaker in accordance with manufacturers instructions. Applying the 4A / mm2 rule to a 1.5mm2 cable allows 6A, The cable is rated to 20A. The expected load is around 4A. Under fault conditons the cable could see over 10A without bothering the breaker thus heating the cable and terminals. Electrically in line with BS7671 the installation is sound.
Any experience with this?? Any thoughts??
I've had the following put to me and can find no reference in relevant parts of BS EN 60079 (elec apparatus for explosive environments) nor a previous standard BS 5345 (selection, installation and maintenance of ...)
We apply a rule of thumb of 4A per mm2 for cables running through potentially contaminated land, which apparently comes from an old pipeline operators code of practice and is recommended to keep temperature cables low. It is also applied to terminals in the hazardous area. Also worth noting is it is associated with Increased Safety Exe equipment.
This therfore causes an issue when re-using cables but replacing the protection and load. The cable in question here is a supply to a lighting column. We have replaced the fittings and fitted an Exe isolator at the column and installed a 10A Type C breaker in accordance with manufacturers instructions. Applying the 4A / mm2 rule to a 1.5mm2 cable allows 6A, The cable is rated to 20A. The expected load is around 4A. Under fault conditons the cable could see over 10A without bothering the breaker thus heating the cable and terminals. Electrically in line with BS7671 the installation is sound.
Any experience with this?? Any thoughts??