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Thread: Power Lines - To All Sparkies
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26th March 2008, 08:53 AM #1Intermediate Member
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Power Lines - To All Sparkies
Excuse my ignorance here. While travelling back from a little beach town on the 90 Mile Beach (South East Vic) over the Easter break, I began noticing the power lines along the roads (the little highways in particular). My question to those out there in the know, why do power lines have so many lines? I understand single phase and 3 phase, but why is there sometime 6 lines or 8 lines on a power pole...I even counted 15 on those big power towers leading from the La Trobe Valley power stations.
Why so many wires? Is there more than 3 phases out there?
Sorry if that's a stupid question. Laugh all you will if you need.
Dan.
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26th March 2008, 09:08 AM #2Senior Member
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Power Lines
why is there sometime 6 lines or 8 lines on a power pole?I even counted 15 on those big power towers leading from the La Trobe Valley power stations.
Is there more than 3 phases out there?
cheersJuan
"If the enemy is in range, so are you."
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26th March 2008, 10:46 AM #3
Dan,
On the really high-voltage lines if the conductor diameter is too small, the electric field intensity can become too large for air-insulation. That is a corona can form around the conductors.
The way to reduce the electric field strength near the conductor is to increase the diameter of the conductor. But a large conductor can become heavy and expensive - so a trick is done using a number of small conductors to mimic a large conductor and thus reduce the electric field without the full expense and weight of a large conductor.
Have a look at 500kV transmission lines and use will see each of the phase conductor is made up of four conductors spaced to form a square cross-section. You will also notice spaces placed between the conductors to maintain the cross-section through the drops between the pylons. The lower voltage high-tension lines get away with using two conductors to do the same trick.
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26th March 2008, 04:52 PM #4Senior Member
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...okay, i'm done laughing. just kidding, it's a good question, juan and chrisp has it spot on.
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26th March 2008, 06:18 PM #5Senior Member
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Also it is common to run more than one circuit on a pole or tower. So the six wires on a transmission line are two (3 phase) circuits.
The ends of those may be in totally different places - the lines may come from totally different directions but be on the same towers at one end where they physically (not necessarily electrically) meet.
Same with poles beside the road. 9 wires could be 3 x high voltage lines which may go in different directions after a point. Or could be different voltages as others have said.
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26th March 2008, 07:59 PM #6
as aobve
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28th March 2008, 09:48 PM #7
Answers offered in above posts are valid but sometimes there may be be additional lines at the 240/415 V level on the poles as well, being (I believe) a neutral line for and a common switched line for sensor operated street lighting (multiple lights grouped to a single sensor)
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28th March 2008, 10:59 PM #8Senior Member
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Surburban line configuration varies a bit between locations but the following is the most common arrangement in Tas.
Top - 3 wires for the 11, 22 or 33kv high voltage.
Next row - 4 wires at 415/240V including a neutral.
Next - Streetlighting pilot wire.
Next - Additional streetlighting pilot under some circumstances.
Bottom - Any other cable, for example communications cables.
In most urban situations only the top 3 rows above would be on the pole. That is, HV, 415/240V, 1 streetlight pilot. The other two (one or both) are less common.
Some short suburban runs (generally limited to a street or two) do not have any HV. In that case it's 415/240V at the top and anything else down below.
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