- North-South Powerline
The North-South Powerline, or Nord-Süd-Leitung, is the world's oldest interconnection for
electric current . It was built between 1924 and 1929 by RWE AG, to transport electricity produced in thehydro-electric power plants inVorarlberg ,Austria and the southernBlack Forest to the Ruhr district.The line begins in
Bludenz and inHerbertingen connects with a second line, which comes fromTiengen . It continues to the transformer stations at Ludwigsburg-Hoheneck, Mannheim-Rheinau,Kelsterbach ,Koblenz , and Bad Neuenahr toBrauweiler .The entire line was originally installed on pylons with a three-tiered arrangement. With the exception of the Kelsterbach-Koblenz and
Heilbronn -Neckarwestheim sections of the line, the North-South Powerline is still carried by the original masts. For the section which travels through Bad Neuenahr, Koblenz, Kelsterbach, Mannheim/Rheinau and Ludwigsburg/Hoheneck,C1-pylon s are used; in other sections, C2 and C3 pylons are used, depending upon the need for the lines to withstand loads of ice during the winter.In 1964, an electric circuit of the section traveling through Ludwigsburg/Hoheneck, Herbertingen and Tiengen switched over to 380 kV. In the section between the transformer stations Ludwigsburg-Hoheneck and Mannheim/Rheinau, an electric circuit was deemed to be dispensable in the year 2003. The two lowest conductors on this section of the line were dismantled between
10 November and16 December 2003 , in order to make better use of the land beneath the line route. The dispensable fourth conductor on the masts was left as an anchor.External links
* http://skyscraperpage.com/diagrams/?b57808
* http://skyscraperpage.com/diagrams/?b57805
* http://skyscraperpage.com/diagrams/?b57806
* http://skyscraperpage.com/diagrams/?b57807
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