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Austin Energy Spacer Cable Application

Austin Energy Spacer Cable Application. SWEDE - April 27 th , 2012 - Galveston Tommy Nylec. Overview. Introduction to Austin Energy Spacer Cable Description Applications Operational Concerns Future Work and Conclusions. Austin Energy Statistics. >400,000 Customers >2,800 MW Generation

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Austin Energy Spacer Cable Application

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  1. Austin EnergySpacer Cable Application SWEDE - April 27th, 2012 - Galveston Tommy Nylec

  2. Overview • Introduction to Austin Energy • Spacer Cable Description • Applications • Operational Concerns • Future Work and Conclusions

  3. Austin Energy Statistics • >400,000 Customers • >2,800 MW Generation • > 50 Distribution Substations • > 10,000 miles of Distribution • >1,600 Employees • Serve 437 square miles including Austin city limits and neighboring areas • Started in 1887

  4. Austin Energy’s Operational View • City Council is Board of Directors • Citizens equivalent to Investors/Members • Public Opinion drives utility direction • Alternative Energy Initiative • Integrate nature into city • Goal to become compact city • City ordinances

  5. Spacer Cable Introduction • Spacer cable is a messenger supported primary distribution system using covered conductors in a close triangular configuration. The system has the mechanical strength to weather severe storms and the electrical strength to prevent faults due to phase to ground or phase to phase contact, tree contact or animal contact.

  6. Cable Details • Messenger • Supports conductors and maintains phase spacing • Messenger supports the spacers and conductors and may be used as system neutral. • Messengers up to 4/0 AWG equivalent conductivity are available • Shields system from lightning strikes • Special messengers available for long spans • Conductor • Available in various voltages & sizes • High density polyethylene (gray or black) • UV resistant • Track resistant • Long leakage distance, self-washing design allows operation with contamination

  7. Spacer Details

  8. Bracket Details

  9. Spacer Cable Application • Heavily wooded or trimming limitations • ROW or property line boundaries • Clearance concerns • Under built facilities • Multiple circuits • Critical reliability • Sensitive environmental areas • Long span distances • Public request for fewer poles

  10. Designing with Spacer Cable • Pole loading can be reduced • Conceptually similar to overhead fiber design • Requires unique sag and tension tables • Technical design guides available • PLS-CADD data for modeling purposes • Turnkey services available from vendors

  11. Spacer Cable Installation

  12. Tangent Framing

  13. Dead End Framing

  14. Angle Framing

  15. Tap Connections

  16. Installation Examples

  17. River Crossing Example

  18. River Crossing Example

  19. Dead End Framing Example

  20. Tree Trimming Impact • Reduces vegetation management costs due to extending cycles through smaller footprints

  21. Spacer Cable Operational Observations • Prevents faults caused by incidental contact • Requires special tools and techniques • Very difficult to remove covering • Allows taps without additional hazards sometimes created by vertical construction • Treat as uninsulated when being worked

  22. Spacer Cable Technical Benefits • Designed to prevent storm related outages • Compact design • High mechanical strength • Lightning shield wire • Less voltage drop

  23. Initial Cost versus O&M Savings • Material more expensive than standard construction • Can be more labor intensive until familiar with equipment • Reduction of tree trimming expenses • ROW acquisition costs reduced • Messenger use requires less structurally significant poles

  24. Spacer Cable at Austin Energy • Initially used for long spans for river crossings and long highway crossings • Still primary use • Beginning to investigate use for zero lot line & tree trimming reduction • 795 only option w/ 4/0 equivalent neutral

  25. Summary • Advantages • Great for long spans • Can reduce tree trimming • Can use shorter poles • Great for multiple circuits or existing ROW • Very reliable • Disadvantages • Higher initial costs versus standard overhead lines • Pole breaks before messenger • Difficulty during install or reinstall • Not always supported by line workers

  26. Questions? Additional technical information can be found at http://www.pesicc.org

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