cwhite6
Electrical
- Jan 21, 2009
- 8
We do a good deal of underground cable calculations in conduit for voltages between 12kV and 230kV. We use a program called CYMCAP made by CYME (now owned by Eaton). At riser poles and transitions, you often have to dive a good bit deeper to fit in the 90 degree turn of the conduit. This causes your cable to be buried up to 10 feet deep where your normal run is 3' deep or so. When we run the calculations, we pick out the worst case places in the conduit runs and analyze those. These are you places where the cable is deepest, next to other cable runs, etc. According to the folks at CYMCAP, we have to consider the conduit elbow area as a deepest point. This of course makes our cable bigger. Some of our customers (utilities and developers) have decided that they will negate the effect of the elbow due to the chimney effect of the hot air rising out of the end of the elbow into free air. This of course assumes you do not plug the end of the conduit or if you do you ventilate the conduit somehow. CYMCAP says this is wrong. So, what do you think? It is not a trivial question as ,for example, one run of 230kV cable is in duct that runs at 3' to top of concrete for 2000'. On each end the conduit dives to 10' to accommodate the elbow required for the bending radius of the cable. If you negate the elbow, you can use 2500kcmil cable. If you take into account the elbow and consider your worst case as 10', you must use 3500 or 4000 kcmil cable. This is a huge cost difference. I cannot find anything in IEEE that is clear about this. IEEE 1793 mentions the chimney effect and ventilation, but it provides no clear answer.