Views: 0 Author: Site Editor Publish Time: 2024-06-13 Origin: Site
Electrical cables are the main means of transmitting the electricity we use in our homes and industries and they are familiar to all of us. However, many people wonder how can electrical cable is made: what material are they made of and what is the manufacturing process?
In this article we are going to answer your questions and try to show you, through our explanatory videos, what is the manufacturing process of electrical cables.
The technology required for an electrical cable to provide service for many years, without incident, involves complex manufacturing processes that require highly qualified personnel.
Electrical cables are mainly made of copper. This is the best conductor of electricity, although there are also types of cables that use aluminium or other types of materials of different qualities depending on the use and type of cable in question.
By means of an illustrative video, our technician explains how an electrical cable is manufactured, from the initial drawing, through the choice of insulation, followed by the phase wiring, the auxiliary protection, the outer sheath and ending with quality control.
Plus other steps such as shipping and aspects of the manufacturing process that ensure it is sustainable and environmentally responsible.
The manufacturing process of a Medium Voltage cable is divided into seven stages: incoming feed, polymer feed, triple extrusion, thickness control, cross-linking, cooling and collection.
Driver input coils are supplied uninterruptedly, via an input accumulator, ensuring continuous, shutdown-free operation.
2. Polymer feed
The feeding of the polymers is done entirely through a clean and closed circuit (clean room), ensuring the purity of the materials from the supply packaging to the machine hopper.
Extrusion is carried out through a triple layer extrusion head, allowing perfect contact between the semiconductors, insulation and the total absence of foreign elements between them.
The thickness of each extruded layer is continuously monitored by an X-ray measuring head. This ensures both standardised thicknesses and perfect concentricity of the layers.
5. Cross-linking
The cross-linking of the insulation and semiconductors is carried out in a nitrogen atmosphere, to eliminate the risk of water absorption, through nine independent temperature zones that allow the cross-linking progression to be perfectly adjusted to the characteristics of each material.
6. Cooling
In this case, the final part of the catenary tube is dedicated to the controlled cooling of the cable already cross-linked. In this way, it is possible to guarantee an optimum temperature at the exit of the tube and during subsequent spooling.
7. Collection
The collection of the insulated cable is carried out on double winders with an automatic distributor, by means of an auxiliary pull track, which ensures perfect spooling, loop by loop and free of excessive tension.