RI 3104 The Overheating of Rubber-Sheathed Trailing Cables

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 13
- File Size:
- 516 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jul 1, 1931
Abstract
"Field inspections and data relative to the use of rubber-sheathed trailing cables in mines show that much cable is ruined or its probable life shortened by being overheated in service.The length of cable required to make connection from a source of supply to a machine at the face workings may be 100 to 500 feet. As a rule, the cable is carried on a reel and unreeled as required; and thus in most cases soma of the cable is not removed from the reel. The overheating generally occurs in that part of the cable which is left on the reel.Factors that determine the heating of trailing cables are:1. The size of the conductors in the cable.2. The maximum energy to be supplied through the cable, based upon the horsepower of the motor and the degree to which the motor is loaded.3. The voltage of the supply and the variation of the voltage at the receiving end.4. The time length of current flow and whether continuous or intermittent.5. The kind of current (direct or alternating).6. The amount of ca· le left or the reel.7. The type of cable used.8. The kind of reel used.In connecti0n with an investigation of the general performance of rubber-sheathed trailing callas, the Bureau of Mines has made a limited study of some of these factors, including the following points:"
Citation
APA:
(1931) RI 3104 The Overheating of Rubber-Sheathed Trailing CablesMLA: RI 3104 The Overheating of Rubber-Sheathed Trailing Cables. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1931.