Edmonton Journal

June 1, 1960: City uses aluminum electric cable in pipelines

THIS DAY IN JOURNAL HISTORY

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Edmonton became the North American pioneer in the commercial use of aluminum electric cable in an oil-filled pipeline.

The eight-kilometre cable was laid from the power plant to the Woodcroft substation under constructi­on at 118th Avenue and 142nd Street.

C.Z. Monaghan, superinten­dent of the City of Edmonton’s electric light and power distributi­on system, said the oil acts as both an insulating and cooling medium. As insulation, it maintains the insulating quality of the cable and wrappings, and as a coolant, it transmits heat to the outer pipe for dispersal through the earth.

The line under constructi­on was designed to handle power pushed through at 72,000 volts, Monaghan said. For up to four hours at a time, before heating became a problem, it could handle 80,000-kilovolt amperes, an amount equivalent to the total city requiremen­ts in 1954.

Pressure oil lines were nothing new to Edmonton. In 1957, the first oil pressure electrical line to be used commercial­ly in Canada was laid from the power to the substation at 97th Street and 127th Avenue, and in 1958, a line was laid at 102nd Street and 51st Avenue.

Regina was the first Canadian city to follow Edmonton with oil lines, laying some cable in 1959.

The lines had been tried successful­ly in the United States for several years.

 ?? EDMONTON JOURNAL/ FILE ?? An oil-filled pipe carrying an aluminum electric cable
EDMONTON JOURNAL/ FILE An oil-filled pipe carrying an aluminum electric cable

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