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Some sort of Insulating bracket?
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I have seen these kind of brackets on wooden OR metal poles used in Denver- Xcel energy territory- A LOT.
What I have noticed is that when these brackets are used, there are LESS porcelain insulators, A LOT less, than usual.
Like on this picture, there would be 8 or 9 Disc insulators hanging down if it was directly connected to the wood or metal.
But on THESE kinds of brackets there always seems to be only FOUR hanging down.
I think these lines would be 115 to at least 150 KiloVolts, A standard voltage for High-Voltage Primary lines.
Are these Utility-Pole brackets insulating? They kind of look like it. I wonder what they are made of, some sort of polymer or something?
I posted this here cause all you experts might know about it. xD
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Sometimes one setup has where one side of the lines has 345 KV and the other side has 115.
HERE Is an example.
The weird thing about that set of power lines is the POLES (or frames) Are meant to hold THREE sets of three wires, but only hold two, leaving one of the sections empty. What might be weirder is that instead of leaving the middle one empty they left one of the side ones empty.
For a while this set gets a third set of three, a 115 KV set that get's added on then branches back off to give electricity to the mountain areas, which actually give electricity to that 45 KV line that will be replaced that give electricity to my HOUSE.
You can see the same set HERE when it has three sets of three. But that was the only time it had three, you can browse the maps to see where they branch on then branch off.
Maybe Xcel energy had the money and decided to just spend the money using more expensive. xD
also..a Thread has began on this photo...High Voltage Ian Thread XD
They made brackets like what is on this picture in Polymer? These don't look polymer..
What do you think these brackets are made out of? They look like they insulate to me.
But they don't look metal, the metal part is on the edges where the insulators attach and where the bracket attaches to the pole, Which is why I think they are an insulating bracket.
I know of one set where there is 365 KV lines on WOODEN POLES! And a 115 KV with a similar setup like this right next to it and follows the 345 KV right next to each other. The two eventually go together and both sets go on one pole, with equal amount of insulators, to a mini power plant.
Let me get a street view...
HERE IS ONE Of the normal ones, as you see the lower voltage have a setup similar to this picture,
Here is another picture of a turn:
CLICK HERE - Note that it has 2 x more insulators than the drop-down with the brackets.
And here is the SAME string of power lines, but in a different place with different poles, in this view you see that there are FOUR sets of three, but on BOTH sets of lines one side has no electricity running though them, they are just support-wires and aren't intended to carry electricity, so you end up seeing one side end abruptly:
HERE
And to look across the street you see that one side of the 345 KV just ends abruptly:
HERE
And here is where they end, as you notice the 115 KV ones one side just ends and leaves some insulators hanging stray and the other one connects to the power lines behind it.
CLICK HERE
(Street view is a little outdated, the metal steel tower are still there but the ones behind it on wooden poles are long gone, and replaced with some bigger 6 2-phased wire steel poles (hollow steel) with polymer insulators)
That's it now. xD There is an example of how weird Xcel energy can get.
I am not sure the voltage but some power lines that I KNOW that are 115 KV have the same brackets and 4 insulators hanging down and then 10 insulators on the dead ends.
And one of the power poles had the same bracket with 4 hanging down but then there was 8 disc insulators connecting to the wire straight to the metal for extra support. If they were lower I Bet they would of just used four straight to the metal. Don't ask me why Xcel did that but it's what they did. Probably wasn't their best idea.
Just the whole set of powerlines had 8 insulators the whole time except on these brackets, that's where I get it from. Xcel probably didn't go by code if there was even a code back then.
But I have a bracket now that is the same type so that is how I Found out they are made of fiberglass.
Is there any ways to find OUT the voltage say at a substation?