Car Park/Street lamps

Just thinking it would be worth checking the cable route with a CAT, can you beg, borrow or hire one in for a day?
If there is a break in the cable it might give you a good idea as to where it is too.
 
Just thinking it would be worth checking the cable route with a CAT, can you beg, borrow or hire one in for a day?
If there is a break in the cable it might give you a good idea as to where it is too.

will certainly try that

thanks
 
Would recommend the CAT and GENNY to trace the route of the cable between the coulmns but to use this equiptment you need proper training. There is a machine our client use on cabel faults made by 3M called a dynatel it places a signal onto the affected cable and tells you where the fault is likely to be. We have a high sucess rate using this device on locating faults in the underground cable network.
Myabe it would be best jsut to recable between the two columns but lay the SWA in some ducting to make a future recable easier.
 
Those metal clad fuse spurs really need replacing with a proper streetlighting cutout. The proper cutouts have brass gland plates for earth continuity and plenty of space avalable for the connections. I would recommentd tofco or Charles en direct.

Hmm dont agree with that sorry. If it were a council owned column with a DNO supply direct into it then that would be different but these are private columns probably switched from inside the building. The fused spurs are providing the fusing and isolation required so in my view they dont need changing.
 
we tried one of those CAT's once to try and see why the mains to the weigh bridge ( dissused, lights run off it for car park ) had lost 2 phases..

traced the cable across the street, along the path, straight past the weigh bridge and straight to the street light..

thought "that can't be right....!!!" tried it again, same thing..
turned the singal generator off and it went away.. confirming that we wern't just picking up the street light mains..

after calling in the DNO to have a look, seems our cable crossed theirs and at some point they had cut through both somehow and joined them all together..
as we'd been getting free power to the car park lights for god knows how many years and probably backfeeding one phase of the entire installation....
 
Why are there two sets of cables on the outgoing side of the spur? even if there are 2 fittings above wouldnt it be better to just link them out?
 
I think it depends on the mood of the installer on the day, personally I prefer to run them individually to the bottom, that way I can separate them out when a ballast burns up etc. Also means less messing about at the top.
 
it's also hard to fish the wire form one arm to the other on some of these 2 arm lights..
easier to wire all the heads on the ground with long leads then feed the cables down the arms and pole when you put the heads on.. less messing about and gravity does all the hard work for you..
 
I would always drop two lengths down the column. With the correct cutout you have bags of room and two flex outlets either side of the fuse carrier...
 

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