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bigspark17

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Hi guys and gals.

a job that has got me second guessing my calculations. I have been asked to fot a float switch to a pump not a problem but the distance is 525m. Now there is no load on the float switch as i will be using a contactor to switch the pump Locally. So can i use a small 1.5mm 2c swa. I see no reason not as there is no load to take into account.
with the cable being so long it affects the price alot should it require a larger cable.
Thanks
 
Hi - over that distance I would also look at a radio solution perhaps? Here‘s a link to one that might work, tx and rx modules would be required but should still be half the swa cost.

 
Agree that 2-core SWA is a simple and adequate solution. Supply can be protected by something small as well, even a 1A or 0.5A C-curve MCB (Hager make them, probably several others) or similar fuse if you want to be sure you meets ADS as well as RCD protection. I don't think you will easily get a RCBO below 6A though, and ideas?

Personally if budget provides for it I would go wired as more likely to be reliable than a battery/solar panel wireless set up. Providing the cable is safely buried of course!
 
Personally I would use SELV to the float switch, a little 24V transformer and a relay operating the contactor. It will be much more tolerant of moisture ingress at the float switch and any repair joints that have to be made, it avoids the 5-10mA leakage that will occur through the cable capacitance at 230V (guesstimate figure, I don't have data for SWA capacitance to hand) no electrical wear on the float switch, etc. You can fuse the thing at 500mA or whatever but nothing harmful would occur with any kind of cable damage, just the pump running or not running. You could even pick up the severed ends and twist them together while live (that's not a recommendation).

On the subject of abnormal operation, one might build in a watchdog timer that stops the pump and lights the alarm beacon on the control box if it runs for an excessive time. E.g. twice the time it normally takes to fill the tank completely. This would detect a variety of possible mishaps and prevent them escalating, e.g. leaking tank or pipe, stuck float switch, clogged pickup strainer.
 
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