Hi,
I am a mechanical engineer tasked with some electrical engineering scope of work and not sure where to look for information on the following...
I have 12 x Off 95mm2 SWA 3 Phase cables coming from Solar inverters into an energy building panel. Each cable is carrying a maximum of 160Amps and will be wired directly into suitably rated MCCB's. In an effort to minimise construction costs, i have been asked if we can bury these 12 cables directly in the ground in a trench with backfill and i am struggling to find the relevant information on it within BS7671. Can anyone help with :-
I apologise if these are simple questions with simple answers, but i have no experience in the industry and just need some guidance.
All help will be deeply appreciated.
Regards & Thanks,
Kieran
I am a mechanical engineer tasked with some electrical engineering scope of work and not sure where to look for information on the following...
I have 12 x Off 95mm2 SWA 3 Phase cables coming from Solar inverters into an energy building panel. Each cable is carrying a maximum of 160Amps and will be wired directly into suitably rated MCCB's. In an effort to minimise construction costs, i have been asked if we can bury these 12 cables directly in the ground in a trench with backfill and i am struggling to find the relevant information on it within BS7671. Can anyone help with :-
- Is there another industrial standard that relates to this type of work?
- Is it allowed to be done without concrete ducting/casing?
- Is it possible to lay all 12 together or must they be separated by soil/sand etc
- Is it possible to bury in say 4 x rows of 3 cables or 3 x rows of 4 cables?
- is there a specified amount of spacing distance with regards burying cables like this?
- Am i correct in thinking the top layer of cables needs to be a minimum of 700mm from the surface to allow protection of the cables?
I apologise if these are simple questions with simple answers, but i have no experience in the industry and just need some guidance.
All help will be deeply appreciated.
Regards & Thanks,
Kieran