Phase and neutral cables entering a metal enclosure through separate holes

I have come across an Installation with the supply single AWA cables glanded off into a aluminium plate. Its a 800A  installation with three phase and neutral cables all passing through separate holes so Eddy currents are a concern.

Anybody got any views ? 

Parents
  • "Eddy" currents occur in steel plates, so aluminium should not be a problem.

  • Actually strictly speaking currents generally don't circulate in steel very much at all - its the regular reversal of the magnetization that causes heating - all those atomic scale compasses . rubbing each other and getting hot and bothered as they flick round 50 times a second. Primary and secondary currents are parallel - i,e, down the length of the wire.

    Mike

  • Disagree, any conductive material including aluminium is a problem.

  • The currents are due to the voltage induced along the length of the armour, and how much current flows rather depends on what is done at the other end.

    Nice drawings but no formulae here.

    Lots of words and formulae but less pictures here
    The bit on induced armour voltage is near the end of the rather long  page. Just above the glossary of symbols.

    But in practice if the gland plate is aluminium too, and thicker than twice the AWA strand thickness and all done up tight, it will run cool - and the table of voltage drop in bs7671 assume this grounded at both ends configuration and makes the allowance in the current rating and voltage drop for the armour losses it creates. (you can up the current rating a tiny bit with insulating gland plates or core rotation.)


    Mike.

Reply
  • The currents are due to the voltage induced along the length of the armour, and how much current flows rather depends on what is done at the other end.

    Nice drawings but no formulae here.

    Lots of words and formulae but less pictures here
    The bit on induced armour voltage is near the end of the rather long  page. Just above the glossary of symbols.

    But in practice if the gland plate is aluminium too, and thicker than twice the AWA strand thickness and all done up tight, it will run cool - and the table of voltage drop in bs7671 assume this grounded at both ends configuration and makes the allowance in the current rating and voltage drop for the armour losses it creates. (you can up the current rating a tiny bit with insulating gland plates or core rotation.)


    Mike.

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