Home
Specific functions(pylon)
Materials used(pylon)
Conductor arrangements(pylon)
=> portal pylon
=> Delta pylon
=> Single-level pylon
=> Two-level pylon
=> three-level pylon
=> Barrel pylon
Specific locations(pylon)
Specific purposes(pylon)
Electric power transmission
Electricity distribution
Communications
Electrical substation
circuit breaker
HVDC
relay
Busbar
Transformer
Voltage regulator
Insulator (electrical)
equipment gallery
introduction webmaster
new entry
Contact
Barrel pylon
Barrel pylon

A barrel pylon is a common type of three-level pylon. It arranges two three-phase circuits in three levels, at which the lowest cross beam possesses a smaller span than the middle crossbar and thus a larger span than the highest crossbar. As a rule the highest and the lowest cross beam have the same span at ton masts.

In the United States, the three-level pylon is common for voltages like 115 kV and 230 kV which venture into cities with small, narrow rights of way. However, the 500 kV wire, which usually runs in rural or suburban regions, usually uses single-circuit delta-pylons instead of the three-level pylon. This is probably because there is no need to build a taller, three-level pylon dual-circuit line when there is enough space for two single-circuit lines. As a result, 500 kV dual-circuit lines are rare in the United States, with only a few instances of line in California, like Path 15 and Path 66. Bonneville Power Administration is the only utility in the United States with several barrel pylon dual-circuit 500 kV wires, located in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana.



Today, there have been 11 visitors (12 hits) on this page!
This website was created for free with Own-Free-Website.com. Would you also like to have your own website?
Sign up for free