This application is a National Stage completion of PCT/EP2010/063134 filed Sep. 7, 2010, which claims priority from British patent application serial no. 0915552.4 filed Sep. 7, 2009.
This invention relates to cable-raceways of the kind for support and routing of electrical, fibre-optic and other cables.
Cable-raceways are conventionally provided in the form of metal channels within which the cables are retained for support and routing, for example within aircraft and other vehicle installations. The use of metal for the channels has the advantage of affording good physical support for the cables along their lengths and a degree of screening of them from external electromagnetic interference. The interference may be for example from lightning but may also be by induction from adjacent runs of electrical cable. Accordingly, although a raceway may be provided as a single channel it is conventional to route electrical cables between which there may be undesirable interference via different, parallel raceway-channels of a unitary, metal extrusion. Raceways constructed in this way provide good physical support but have the disadvantage that changes in direction and elevation of the cable-run can be accommodated only by fabricating specially-contoured channeling-sections adapted to the particular change required, and coupling them into the raceway between standard straight-sections. A further disadvantage arises in particular in aircraft installations where weight is a significant factor.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a form of cable-raceway by which these disadvantages can be to a large extent overcome.
According to the present invention there is provided a cable-raceway wherein a channel of the raceway is defined by an elongate tape that comprises an electrically-conductive mesh, the tape having longitudinal folds to define upstanding mutually-spaced side-walls of the channel.
The mesh may be a woven mesh that comprises electrically-conductive strands, and may have the warp of the woven mesh extending longitudinally of the channel. The weave may be a narrow-fabric weave, and the weft of the weave may involve a single unbroken electrically-conductive strand.
Also, the electrically-conductive strands may be individual wire-strands or a plurality of wire-strands twisted together, and the wire-strands which may be of nickel-coated copper, may be bare so that good electrical contact between all of them in common in the mesh.
The mesh may be covered fully or partially on one face, or if desired on both faces, with electrically-insulating material. In particular, the electrically-insulating material may be in the form of a plastics sheet that is secured (for example, by stitching or bonding) to the mesh within the channel to provide an electrically-insulating barrier between the mesh and the cables within the channel. The plastics material may be, for example, of polytetrafluoroethylene.
The cable-raceway according to the invention may comprise a plurality of parallel channels extending side by side with one another, the longitudinal folds of the tape defining in respect of each channel a bottom of the channel and mutually-spaced side-walls upstanding from the channel-bottom. Brackets, which may be of metal and located at intervals along the raceway, may provide for electrical ground-bonding of the raceway. Each bracket may have a base that extends transversely of the channels with the channel bottom of each individual channel secured to the base of that bracket and with arms upstanding from the base providing support for retention of the tape in its plural-channel configuration.
Cable-raceways according to the present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
Referring to
As illustrated schematically in
The tape 3 is folded on longitudinal fold-lines indicated by chain-dotted lines 12 in
As illustrated by
As illustrated most clearly in
Each retainer 20, which is of molded plastics, is of the substantially-rectangular form shown in
As well as using the brackets 13 at spaced intervals along the raceway 1 for retention of the tape 3 in its folded four-channel configuration and enhancing its load-carrying capacity longitudinally, retention in that configuration may be achieved to the same effect intermediate the ground-bonding brackets 13 as illustrated in
Referring to
The use of the flexible woven-tape 3 to define the channels 2 of the raceway 1 has the advantage that changes in direction of the raceway can be achieved simply by bending and without the need to break the run to insert a specially-configured section. The bending of the raceway 1 to effect a change of elevation may be achieved by bending it to incline upwardly or downwardly in the plane of
Furthermore, as well as accommodating bends for changes of elevation and azimuth, the raceway of the invention may readily accommodate twisting along its length for changes of plane of the channels 2.
Accordingly, the flexibility of the woven structure allows a single tape 3 to be used for the full length of the cable-run required, without having to couple tapes together end to end. Where however, there is a need to couple tapes together end-to-end, this may be readily carried out as illustrated in exploded form by
Referring to
The cable-raceway 1 described above is effective to afford electromagnetic shielding for the cables contained in the individual channels 2. Where the height of the channel is three times its width, a significant degree of shielding from external sources of interference has been found to be good for up to a 60% cable-filling of the channel. Furthermore, provided cables filling the channel do not protrude from its open top, interference between adjacent channels can be avoided.
Although the tape 3 of the cable-raceway 1 described above is covered on one face by the electrically-insulating sheet 9, this covering and the insulation it provides within the channels 2, may be dispensed with. The mesh 7 may be bare or may be coated for example with nylon; a coating of this form can be used to add stiffness to the raceway and fill inter-strand gaps in the weave and reduce adhesion of debris.
Furthermore, it will be understood that the invention is not limited to the provision of a specific number of channels in that the number may be more than four and may be fewer, and indeed may be merely one.
Where strengthening of the woven tape used for the raceway is required, this may be achieved by the introduction of additional strands of metal, plastics or fibre into the weave (weft or warp). Moreover, the introduction of additional strands may be distributed across the width of the tape, but may also be in groupings at individual locations as illustrated in
In
Where break out of cabling from the raceway is required, this may achieved simply by feeding the cabling out from between two closely-located support-assemblies that are of either of the forms illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0915552.4 | Sep 2009 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2010/063134 | 9/7/2010 | WO | 00 | 5/4/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/027002 | 3/10/2011 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20120205134 A1 | Aug 2012 | US |