ELECTRIC POWER

In a Radial distribution system, the utility lines gradually spread outward.
In a Network distribution system, there is usually a major loop around the urban center, and additional inner loops within the major one. This requires multiple points in the system which are not active at any given moment.
In a Loop distribution system, there will be one large loop of electric lines. This requires a single point in the system which is not active at any given moment.

INTRODUCTION

The sources of electrical power can be grouped into four resources: Hydro-power (reservoir); Thermal power (coal, oil, natural gas); Nuclear power (nuclear power plants); and Green power (wind farms, solar panels).

From the source of electric power to the generating station will be the gathering lines.  The transmission lines are the power lines on the transmission towers.  Transmission power lines were almost always aerial in the past, and commonly on large metal towers.  These days they can sometimes be buried in concrete duct structures.

Transmission power can be anywhere from 150,000 volts (150kv) to 760,000 volts (760kv), and on large metal towers.

These switch to a lower voltage on wooden poles, typically about 70kv to 200kv, commonly known as sub-transmission.

From the sub-stations downstream are the distribution lines, and then of course the services.

Common transmission tower.
Coal burning power plant.
Wind generating power.

PHASE: 1, 2, OR 3

Two phase power is very uncommon, but electric power can be single phase, two phase, or 3-Phase.  This may be spelled out, or it may be replaced with the symbol Ø.  This means that three phase power may be written as 3Ø.  All electric current has phase, frequency, and wavelength.  Phase could be described as the timing of a single cycle of current.  All current on the same power cable is functioning in-phase with itself no matter which point of the cable you are looking at.

The purpose of 3 phase is to provide what could be called more “torque” to the power outlet.  This can be compared to the number of cylinders in an internal combustion engine.  While most power lawnmowers operate on a single cylinder, automobile engines usually have 6 or 8 cylinders.  The lawnmower works properly, but it does not have enough force with the single cylinder to create a “push” to the current.  An 8-cylinder engine on the other hand, has each cylinder in a different position at all times.  As one cylinder is firing and moving downward to push the crankshaft, another cylinder is just starting its upstroke away from the crankshaft, and the other 6 cylinders are in intermediate positions between the up and down cylinders.  Only one cylinder fires at a time, and the others are in evenly spaced positions on the way up or down.  Every cylinder is backing up the others by firing while the others are in the non-firing positions.

3 Phase power is roughly similar.  The current from each cable “hits” at an evenly spaced time interval.  This provides the force to drive large motors.  These can be large fans, pumps, and other machines that require more torque in order to operate properly.

Most 3 Phase current is used in manufacturing plants and other industrial areas, but they are also necessary for many businesses that may not seem obvious at first.  Even a small car wash usually requires 3 phase for the water pumps.  Many residential customers also have 3 phase power to their home.  This is usually a homeowner who has certain types of machinery in their home or garage that contains large motors, such as a band-saw.  An office building does not necessarily need 3 phase just to operate computers and coffee machines, so it is possible to come across large office buildings that are fed by single phase.  If it is a multi-story building, then 3 phase becomes far more likely because a high-rise is more likely to have an elevator and elevators require large motors.

LAYOUT

Substation
Substation

Electric power of course goes from the power sources downstream to the substations.  However, the distribution portion of an electric plant is not easy to simplify, because there are three different types of distribution layouts.  They are Radial, Loop, and Network.

RADIAL is the layout most people would expect with electric power.  The power lines stretch outward across town, carrying less and less voltage until each line comes to an end.  Today, this system is still common in rural areas and small towns.

In a LOOP system, the main power lines run in a large circular pattern, returning to the original point.  This of course would mean that the electricity is feeding power from two different directions at the same time, and this is technically impossible.  However, there is an additional element used here.

In a loop system there are numerous switch gears placed along the route of the main power.  At any given moment, one of those switch gears has an isolated set of primary cables.  The cables are in the ground, and connected inside the switch gears, yet the primaries are completely isolated with a scissor switch.  Only if there is a break in the line at another point, would the scissor switch flip the connections and complete the circuit.

This provides better continuity to the subscriber.  If a power line is damaged for any reason, power is almost immediately switched to the other route, so now power is coming from the lines south of your house instead of north.

Loop systems are rather noticeable because of a sizable number of switch gears.  Because of their advantage in providing continued service, Loop systems are becoming more and more common.

A NETWORK system is somewhat like a Loop system, but includes more than one large loop.  Network systems are common in downtown areas where there can be high load multi-story office buildings, as well as government offices.  This system provides the most reliable service possible because there are various routes that the power can be altered to automatically.

CABLES AND WIRES

Transformers are rather easy to identify by their size and shape. Single phase are smaller and box shaped. Three phase are larger, usually somewhat rectangular, and with a radiator on the backside.
Since the 1950's, buried primary cables are housed in thick poly insulation with a red stripe. Previously, buried power lines were encased in lead coating.

Underground power is rather easy to explain.  Primary cables are upstream from a transformer and secondary cables are downstream. 

The primary cables will come down the pole, and then may go to a switch gear, or direct to a J-box, or straight to a transformer.  No matter which it is, the primary cable or cables will end up at a transformer.

Each cable represents a separate phase of electric power.  This is true for both primary and secondary cables.  So, if you uncovered a single primary cable in the ground, then that is single phase primary.  If you uncovered three secondary cables side by side, then that would be three phase secondary.  This is also true for the cables as they are coming down a pole.  Three large insulated black cables with a red stripe is three phase primary.

This makes it very easy to identify those insulated cables, coming down a pole, or uncovered in an excavation.  The primaries have a thick black insulation with a red stripe.  The secondaries are also black insulated, but have a tight insulated jacket like the power cables in the walls of your house.

AERIAL POWER WIRES

But things change greatly when we are dealing with aerial power.  First of all, technically, a cable has multiple conductors, while a wire is a single conductor.  Not everyone refers to cables and wires in this way.  But it does become an issue when we are looking at aerial power.

Simple aerial distribution power.

All electric current functions in a circuit.  In other words, electricity does not actually “feed” your house.  It is more accurate to say that electricity “runs through” your house, and the lights and appliances in your house only tap in to that electricity.  The current must have a conductive path out to the buildings – and a separate path back again to the sub-station.  If we look at just the 2 main conductors involved, the hot wire and the neutral wire, then the electricity is coming in to your house on the hot wire, and heading back to the substation on the neutral wire.  Now, admittedly that is a simplified and incomplete description, but it should explain the basic concept of what is taking place.  All current operates in a circuit, or it simply does not operate.  And a circuit requires two conductors.

Yet, almost all aerial power is a single conductor.  Therefore, a single aerial power wire represents only half of a circuit.  This is why we often see two aerial power wires side by side on a pole line.  There is two phase power, but it is very uncommon.  Those two aerial power wires are almost always going to be a single-phase line of power – one hot and one neutral.

From this we could conclude that 3-phase aerial power would require a total of 6 aerial lines, but that is only with transmission power.

Some aerial power consists of 4 power lines, yet there is no such thing as 4-phase power...
...this is because one of the power lines is a shared neutral in an MGN arrangement.
In an MGN arrangement, that shared neutral is difficult to see, but that is what accounts for 4 aerial wires altering to 3 buried primary cables.

With distribution power we usually see something quite different.  In a typical layout, there will be three aerial wires running parallel to each other, then another wire slung lower on the pole line.  This is 3-phase power with 4 aerial wires.  This is because the fourth wire, the lower wire, is a shared neutral.  The 3 parallel wires are all hot wires, all carrying electricity to your house.  But the fourth wire is the return wire, the neutral wire for the path back to the substation.  In other words, 3-phase is separate on the hot wires, but shared on the neutral wire.  This is called Multi-Grounded Neutral, or MGN.  

However, some confusion can come from a slight difference in the pole layout.  Although with most MGN the hot wires are as previously described, all parallel to each other, and the neutral wire below, but that is not always the case.  On some distribution pole lines you will be able to see 4 aerial wires running parallel with each other.  This has given rise to the mistaken belief that there must be 4-phase power, but there is no such thing as 4-phase power.

What we are seeing with 4 aerial wires side by side is no different than the other arrangement, except that the neutral wire is running parallel with the others, instead of below them.  This is very apparent, but also very difficult to see from the ground.  However, it is easiest to recognize at any pole where the 3-phase lines come down the pole.  At that point, the neutral wire is connecting with each one of the primary cables going down the pole, and has an additional wire running down the side of the pole to ground, hence the name Multi-Grounded Neutral.

Therefore, there are four aerial power wires running pole to pole, but only 3 power primaries coming down from the pole.  Three of the aerial wires are hot wires, each feeding to a different primary, and the fourth is the shared neutral with 4 separate small wires, three running to the primaries, and the fourth running down in to the earth as a ground wire.

CABLE SPACING

On aerial power cables, the higher the voltage on the line, the more spacing there will be between the cables.  There will also be an increase in the distance to the ground.  This is why transmission towers are so high off the ground.  The higher the voltage, the more spacing required.

Although this is very noticeable on aerial lines, the same principle is followed for underground power lines.  However, buried primary cables have a thick black jacket of insulation, so the distance between primaries does not need to be anywhere near the distance they would be in the air.

The design of the pole/tower is a fair indicator of the amount of voltage on the line. The higher the voltage - the more separation that is required between the aerial wires, and between the power wires and the ground.
These buried primary cables were sloppily placed in the ground, and have caused erratic power problems for the customers.

Although buried 3-phase primaries are laid side by side, they are usually placed a distance apart from each other, much the same way as they are placed aerially.  A typical 3-phase primary may have the conductors spaced a foot apart from each other, but higher voltage 3-phase may have the primary cables spaced as much as 3 feet apart.  Again, this will not be the same distance that the cables would be if they were aerial.

MATERIALS

Electric power can often be placed in a conduit or duct structure.  In some areas, conduits are mandatory for power cables, in other areas they may only be mandatory in certain conditions.  Besides plastic and steel conduits, they may also be placed within concrete or asbestos cement duct runs.  This is becoming more common as buried transmission power is becoming more common.

On buried high voltage transmission lines the cables may be in a very thick duct of concrete, with only occasional manhole access.

Power cables went through a history of design similar to telephone cables, a wide variety of strange materials being used.  In 1872 paper insulation was first used for power cables.  Often these cables had an outer insulation of natural rubber which was processed from rubber trees from South America, while others were inserted in to lead or iron pipes.

By about 1887 the PILC cable was becoming a common design, especially for power cables used for carrying up to 25,000 volts.  This was the Paper Insulated Lead Cable, made by wrapping the conductor in paper tape, inserting this in to a lead pipe, and then immersing the pipe in to wax, and then hot oil.  The paper inside the cable then was soaked with wax, which when it dried, created a filled interior to the lead.  PILC cables were the common power cable from about 1887 to the 1950’s.

The modern power lines of the world are usually ACSR.

Starting in the 1950’s, power cables switched to Aluminum Conductor Steel Reinforced, or ACSR.  Today, almost any power cable you will see on a pole line anywhere in the world will be an ACSR cable.  There can be differences in their sizes, but the construction of the cables is the same.

UNDERBUILTS

Once the transmission lines reach a distribution sub-station, what you might call a neighborhood sub-station, then the power lines become distribution power.  The voltage will be dropped down at this point, typically to about 10,000 volts (10kv), but it can be anywhere from 5kv to 15kv.  All power lines out of the distribution sub-station will be distribution power, and this is where other utilities are commonly under-built with the power lines.

The power cables will always be the top cables on the pole line.  Then there will be a safety zone below the power lines to separate the communication cables from the electric lines.  The safety zone may not be wide, but it is important to prevent the communication workers from having to work to closely to the electric cables.

Any communication cable on a power line is an underbuilt. These are below the power lines, and are found only on distribution pole lines.

The top communication cable is almost always telephone.  Telephone is the oldest communication cable and they have a long history of cooperation with power companies.  The lower communication cables may then be coaxial and then fiber, but with the continual addition of new cables there is no real pattern to the placement of fiber and coax.

So, looking at a string of cables on a pole line the order will be: all power lines on top – a short safety zone space – second cables down are almost always telephone – then coaxial and fiber, but not in any particular order.

POWER ENCLOSURES

SWITCH GEARS are the largest electric enclosures outside of a sub-station.  They are in a squared shape much like a single-phase transformer, but much larger.   Although these are simply called “switch gears” they would be more accurately called “automated switch gears”.

It is becoming more common for water and gas operators to design their plant with the main lines in a circular connection.  If there is a water line break at any point, most houses will still be getting water because the water is being fed through a different water main.

As was mentioned in Plant Layout, many modern power distribution systems are in a Loop layout, and that requires switch gears.  These allow electrical power to function much like a looped water or gas system, except that the loop is not entirely complete at any given moment.

Switch gears are always 3-phase primary.  They are commonly green like most power enclosures, but can be gray or aluminum.  In urban areas they may be in underground vaults.

Pad-mounted switch gears.
Pad-mounted switch gear.
Low profile switch gear.

A JUNCTION BOX, or J-BOX is only a splice enclosure for primary cables.  They may be single phase or three phase, however, they contain only primary cables.  A J-Box is usually quite distinguishable because they are the only power enclosure in a rectangular shape.  One side of the J-Box can be lifted up to allow easy access for the linemen.  This gives the J-Box another distinguishable feature, a slanted top cover.

A J-Box is usually in the standard green, but there are newer J-Boxes manufactured in the fiber/plastic material, and usually in a light tan color.  A J-Box can also be in an underground vault in urban areas.

Common J-box. The J-box is simply a splice box for electric primary cables.
An older J-box.
A J-box will have a slanted lift-up side cover to provide easy access for the linemen.
Some modern J-boxes are made of poly/fiber material, but notice that they still have the slanted side lift-up cover.
Another poly/fiber J-box.
Common J-box on the left - and single phase transformer on the right.
If all of the possible power features were lined up next to each other going downstream, it would be switch gear, J-box, transformer, secondary pedestal, and meter.

In some regions, many of the J-Boxes, Transformers, and even secondary pedestals are not metallic.  There has been a gradual shift in many areas away from the steel cabinets, and changing to a fiber/plastic material.  These are usually produced in roughly the same size and shape of the older enclosures.

TRANSFORMERS

Electric power uses a large number of transformers.  Sub-stations have multiple transformers which are step-up transformers increasing the voltage on the line.  These look like massive radiators.

Downstream of the sub-stations, there will always be step-down transformers to lower the voltage.  These transformers can be aerial or buried and single phase or three Phase.  All power must pass through a step-down transformer before it can feed any building, cabinet, or other feature. 

These transformers are “stepping down” the voltage from possibly 5 to 15 kilovolts on the primary, down to the 110 or 120 voltage the building requires.  The standard voltage today in North America is 120 volts, but there are still very old homes with 110-volt wiring.

In most cases the transformer is going to be only 30 feet to 50 feet from the meter.  The maximum distance a secondary cable can run in North America is about 250 feet.  This is dictated by the voltage on the line.  In Europe a secondary can be eight times longer because of different voltages and other alterations, but for the U.S. that 250 feet is the maximum distance between the meter on a house, and the device that alters primary cable to secondary,

Aerial transformers have a round can-shape to them and are often called “cans”.  Power coming from one aerial transformer is single phase, while power coming from three transformers is 3-Phase.

Aerial transformers are canister-shaped features, and are often called "cans".
Three-phase transformers have an oil cooled radiator on the backside, though often like this one, the radiator is mostly covered in metal sheets for protection from vandalism.
The radiator on this three-phase transformer is more visible.

The pad mounted versions are very different.  Single phase or three phase, ground transformers are almost always a single enclosure.  The single-phase transformers are one of the most well know utility features.  They are only a few feet high, squared in shape, and found in neighborhoods everywhere.

The ground 3-Phase transformers are usually 5 or 6 feet tall, much larger than a single phase, and rectangular in shape.  They also have an outer radiator on the back side, sometimes with a metal covering over the radiator.

All of these step-down transformers, those outside of a sub-station, are the only electric enclosure that can have both primary cables and secondary cables.

Single phase transformer.
Three small single phase transformers side by side. Therefore this is actually a three-phase power run feeding a water pump house.

SECONDARY PEDESTALS are not overly common.  They can be found in many residential areas, but occasionally in other areas where they are used to feed secondary power to street lights.  Secondary pedestals are just as they sound.  They have secondary cables both in and out.  These are small, usually green, and flat-topped, almost always with the word ELECTRIC embossed on the top.

Secondary pedestal. These will have only secondary power lines, never primary cables.
Another type of secondary pedestal.
Two poly/fiber secondary pedestals.

ELECTRIC METERS like water and gas meters, are used to determine the amount of service that has been provided to the subscriber.  Also, just like water and gas, a power meter is always the end point of ownership for the power company.  If the meter is placed a distance from the building, then the power lines from the meter to the building are owned by the property owner.  Many property owners are completely unaware of this legality.

Electric meter, the final downstream power feature.
Electric meters can often be quite a distance from the apparatus they power. especially in the countryside.
A gang of power meters on an apartment building.

ELECTRIC MANHOLES have the same layout and purpose as a telephone manhole.  They contain only cables and cable connections.  They have a small round opening at the top with an iron lid.

The honeycomb pattern on manholes is almost always an indicator of a telephone manhole. But this one was constructed for an electric vault.

ELECTRIC VAULTS are underground enclosures, though not of any specific purpose.  A vault may contain a switch gear, or a J-Box, or even a transformer.  They are a rectangular shaped underground structure with large steel swing-up doors.  Vaults are more common in urban areas to remove the power enclosures from automobile damage and vandalism.

Electric vault.
Electric vault.