Unfamiliar electrical schematic symobol

I've been working with electrical schematics for quite some time, but I recently stumbled upon symbols representing loads that I'm not familiar with. Are these new additions or have they been around, and I've somehow missed them? Any insights would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!

 

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  • It's a TP isolator. The Architectural ACAD symbol. If you zoom in on the schematic you can see the handle at the top ; the three diagonal bars donate three phases 

    regards burn 

  • The Architectural ACAD symbol.

    I'm not 100 % sure of the alignment with IEC 60617?

    The OP says it's on a schematic, and the later post is a schematic ... therefore I believe symbols should be as per IEC 60617-7-13-xx and be like the single-line diagram symbols I posted earlier (with "TPN" qualifier or similar)?

    However, if it's architectural (i.e. for use on floor plans and elevations to show rough location of equipment and controls in a room), IEC 60617-11-14-xx and a TNP (4-pole) switch, disconnector or isolator would look something like this, perhaps with a feature indicating it's an isolator.

    Can anyone confirm who has access to the current IEC 60617 database?

  • I didn't say it was in line with IEC 60617. Nowadays most of us working on larger scale construction projects have no choice but to use Autodesk products (ACAD 2D or Revit for BIM 3D modelling) and have to take what they give us. 

    regards burn

  • The great thing about standards is that there are so many of them to choose from!

  • The great thing about standards is that there are so many of them to choose from!

    Not in this case. BS 7671 specifically requires IEC 60617 (see Regulation 514.9.1)

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