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Eleven floors and the basement area are served by a group of lifts in a Sparkasse building. Not all floors are accessible to customers. This is regulated by an access control system. The required bus signals are transmitted via a special cable which, due to its design, can demonstrably withstand the high tensile strain caused by the freely hanging application in the long term.
"Our contact person suggested that we use an extremely robust bus cable for long, suspended travels from the industrial environment," recalls Krauß. "At the time, however, it was still in the test phase. Nevertheless, we decided to use it. And we haven't regretted that decision once."
"We manufacture cables for almost every application, using a wide variety of materials and processes," explains igus® Product Manager Andreas Muckes. "Depending on the design, this is possible from lengths of 500m." A wide variety of cables are tested in the company's own laboratory, particularly with regard to their dynamics over long and short distances. Radii and torsion also play an important role. The focus is always on the right cable concept for demanding movements. Over 2 billion test cycles are realised every year for research and development.
Tests in the laboratory proved that the special cable in the tensile test performed around 15,000% better than the standard required in the corresponding DIN VDE 0298. When pulled with 2,919N, the cable does not break and data transmission remains permanent. The cable in the system is 74m long.
Due to their own weight, normal bus cables are not permitted as they can only be loaded up to 15 N/mm² due to the lack of a supporting element. All in all, the facts show that the free-hanging cable could be more than 1km long without showing any loss of performance. "For us, this means that we could theoretically extend the building significantly," says the Head of Building Organisation at Sparkasse. To be on the safe side and measure data, an additional cable was initially installed in the lift system. The lifts run with very high frequency. Almost six months after the system was commissioned, the lift had already carried out 56,970 trips. Two years later, it will exceed 160,000 without any faults being recorded. "The approval limit will certainly not be reached - it is more likely that a new lift control system will be installed," says igus Sales Consultant Eugen Kowalczyk with certainty. chainflex® cables for industrial applications are designed for very small bend radii, high numbers of cycles, speeds and accelerations in addition to demanding environmental conditions.
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