IEEE 45-2002
$120.79
IEEE Recommended Practice for Electric Installations on Shipboard
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
IEEE | 2002 | 273 |
Revision Standard – Inactive-Reserved. Recommendations for the design, selection, and installation of equipment on merchant vessels with electrical apparatus for lighting, signaling, communication, power, and propulsion are provided.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
1 | Cover Page |
2 | Title Page |
4 | Introduction |
5 | Participants |
7 | CONTENTS |
16 | 1. Overview 1.1 Scope 1.2 Purpose 1.3 Vessel classification |
17 | 1.4 Documentation |
18 | 1.5 Environmental conditions |
19 | 1.6 Equipment construction, testing, and certification 1.7 Application of various national and international standards 1.8 Materials |
20 | 1.9 Brittle material 2. References |
24 | 3. Definitions 3.1 General |
27 | 3.2 Cable installation 3.3 Generators |
28 | 3.4 Motors |
30 | 3.5 Converters 3.6 Rotating machine ventilation |
31 | 3.7 Equipment enclosures |
32 | 3.8 Control apparatus and switchgear |
34 | 3.9 Insulation system 3.10 Types of circuits and terms |
36 | 3.11 Automatic or centralized control systems |
37 | 4. Power system characteristics 4.1 Standard systems 4.2 Standard voltages 4.3 Standard frequency 4.4 Selection of voltage and system type |
38 | 4.5 AC power system characteristics |
42 | 4.6 Power quality and harmonics 5. Power system design 5.1 General |
47 | 5.2 Circuit elements 5.3 Shore power 5.4 Demand factors |
48 | 5.5 Voltage drop 5.6 Lighting distribution |
50 | 5.7 Distribution for power equipment 5.8 Branch circuits |
52 | 5.9 System protection |
63 | 5.10 Lightning protection |
64 | 6. Emergency power systems 6.1 General 6.2 Emergency generators |
65 | 6.3 Emergency storage battery |
66 | 6.4 Emergency power distribution system |
67 | 6.5 Emergency switchboard configuration 6.6 Temporary emergency power |
68 | 6.7 Temporary emergency circuits 6.8 Final emergency circuits |
69 | 6.9 Time factor for supply of emergency power: 6.10 Cargo vessels |
70 | 6.11 Passenger vessels (ocean and coastwise) 6.12 Passenger vessels (coastal and inland waters) 6.13 Passenger vessels (other) 6.14 Passenger vessels with RO-RO (roll on-roll off) cargo spaces |
71 | 6.15 Passenger vessels without an independent emergency source of power 7. Electric power generation 7.1 General 7.2 Installation and location |
72 | 7.3 Prime movers |
76 | 7.4 Generators |
82 | 7.5 Generator metering and protection—general |
84 | 7.6 Minimum equipment for ac generator switchboard |
86 | 8. Switchboards 8.1 Switchboard arrangement criteria |
87 | 8.2 Installation and location |
89 | 8.3 Low-voltage switchboards (600 V ac and less for ANSI; 1000 V ac and less for IEC)—description… |
90 | 8.4 Medium-voltage switchboards (0.601–38.0 kV ac for ANSI and 1.01–35.0 kV ac for IEC)—descripti… |
91 | 8.5 Switchboards—application requirements |
92 | 8.6 Circuit breakers—application 8.7 Temperatures 8.8 Arrangement of switchboard equipment |
93 | 8.9 Overload and short-circuit protection |
94 | 8.10 Switchboard phase and ground bus |
95 | 8.11 Terminations 8.12 Wire and conductor terminal lugs |
96 | 8.13 Nameplates 8.14 Switchboard testing 9. Control systems 9.1 General |
97 | 9.2 Documentation |
98 | 9.3 Control system design—general 9.4 Control system equipment location |
99 | 9.5 Machinery control |
101 | 9.6 System design characteristics 9.7 Control system power supply 9.8 Continuity of power 9.9 Communication systems |
102 | 9.10 Alarms |
103 | 9.11 Control cabling 9.12 Control power distribution 9.13 Hazardous location considerations 9.14 Control system testing |
104 | 9.15 Maintenance philosophy and design 9.16 Control system sensors 9.17 Control system programming |
105 | 9.18 Design considerations |
106 | 9.19 Instrumentation 9.20 Environmental conditions |
110 | 9.21 Control system voltage and frequency 9.22 Electromagnetic frequency 9.23 Equipment enclosures 9.24 Control console design—general |
111 | 9.25 Control console components 9.26 Meters and gauges 9.27 Control devices |
112 | 9.28 Ergonomics (human factors) |
113 | 9.29 Identification and marking |
114 | 9.30 Ventilation 9.31 Sealing 9.32 Environmental monitoring 10. Control apparatus 10.1 General |
115 | 10.2 Installation and location 10.3 Types |
116 | 10.4 Protecting cases |
117 | 10.5 Disconnecting means 10.6 Manual starters and controllers 10.7 Magnetic starters and controllers |
118 | 10.8 Solid-state starters and controllers 10.9 Medium voltage controllers |
119 | 10.10 Pushbuttons 10.11 Resistors 10.12 Circuit breakers 10.13 Knife blade switches and contacts 10.14 Corrosion-resistant parts |
120 | 10.15 Nameplates 10.16 Tests 10.17 Limits of temperature rises |
121 | 10.18 Insulation-voltage test |
122 | 10.19 General requirements for contactors 10.20 Rectifiers |
125 | 11. Control application 11.1 General |
126 | 11.2 Deck machinery |
128 | 11.3 Ventilation fans 11.4 Galley, laundry, workshop, print shop, and similar spaces 11.5 Machinery space auxiliaries 11.6 Air compressor 11.7 Remote stopping systems |
129 | 12. Transformers 12.1 General |
130 | 12.2 Installation and location 12.3 Type, number, and rating 12.4 Voltage regulation 12.5 Parallel operation 12.6 Temperature rise 12.7 Terminals and connections |
131 | 12.8 Nameplates 13. Motors 13.1 General application |
132 | 13.2 AC and dc motors—general 13.3 Selection |
133 | 13.4 Installation and location 13.5 Insulation of windings 13.6 Locked rotor kVA |
134 | 13.7 Efficiency 13.8 Lubrication 13.9 Terminal arrangements |
135 | 13.10 Corrosion-resistance parts 13.11 Nameplates 13.12 Ambient temperature 13.13 Limits of temperature rise |
136 | 13.14 Insulation tests 13.15 Insulation resistance |
137 | 13.16 Tests 13.17 Temperature-rise test 13.18 Insulation resistance test 13.19 High-potential test |
138 | 13.20 Overload test 13.21 Commutation test |
139 | 14. Motor application—general 14.1 General |
140 | 14.2 Duty rating |
141 | 14.3 Steering gear motors 15. Brakes 15.1 Types 15.2 AC brakes 15.3 DC brakes 15.4 Accessibility 15.5 Enclosures |
142 | 15.6 Construction 15.7 Tests |
143 | 15.8 Brake application 16. Magnetic friction clutches 16.1 General 16.2 Tests |
144 | 17. Distribution equipment 17.1 Distribution panels 17.2 Circuit breakers 17.3 Wire lugs and connectors |
145 | 17.4 Feeder box fittings 17.5 Branch box fittings 17.6 Connection box fittings 17.7 Shore connection boxes |
146 | 17.8 Feeder, branch, and connection boxes |
147 | 17.9 Receptacles, plugs, and switches—nonwatertight |
149 | 17.10 Receptacles, plugs, and switches other than nonwatertight |
150 | 17.11 Terminal and stuffing tubes 17.12 Multicable penetrators 17.13 Bolts, taps, and so on 17.14 Power factor correction capacitors |
151 | 18. Heating equipment 18.1 General |
152 | 18.2 Temperature and tests 18.3 Nameplates |
153 | 19. Galley equipment 19.1 Electric cooking equipment |
156 | 19.2 Testing 19.3 Motor-driven equipment |
157 | 19.4 Nameplates 20. Lighting equipment 20.1 General |
158 | 20.2 Location 20.3 Provisions for portable lighting 20.4 Permanent watertight fixtures 20.5 Permanent nonwatertight fixtures 20.6 High-intensity discharge lamp fixtures |
159 | 20.7 Lighting for hazardous locations 20.8 Illumination 20.9 Searchlights |
160 | 20.10 Emergency lighting 20.11 Nameplates 21. Navigation lights and signals 21.1 General |
161 | 21.2 Navigation lights 21.3 Signaling lights 21.4 Navigation light indicator panel |
162 | 21.5 Whistle and siren control systems |
163 | 22. Storage batteries 22.1 General 22.2 Recommendations 22.3 Specific applications |
164 | 22.4 Type of batteries |
166 | 22.5 Selection and assembly 22.6 Installation and arrangement |
169 | 22.7 Ventilation |
170 | 22.8 Cables |
171 | 22.9 Battery rating 22.10 Charging facilities 22.11 Overload protection |
172 | 23. Cables types for installation on shipboard 23.1 Marine Shipboard Cable |
173 | 23.2 Navy cable 23.3 Other shipboard cables 23.4 MI cable 23.5 Specialty cables 24. Cable application 24.1 General |
174 | 24.2 Distribution cables (600/1000 V) 24.3 Distribution cables (medium voltage, 2000 V to 35�000 V) 24.4 Control cables (600/1000 V) 24.5 Signal cables (300 V, 600/1000 V) 24.6 Special service requirements |
175 | 24.7 AC applications 24.8 Ampacities |
183 | 24.9 Ambient temperatures 24.10 Armored cables 24.11 Skin effect ratio |
184 | 24.12 Circuits in the vicinity of magnetic compass |
185 | 25. Cable installation 25.1 Single-conductor ac cables 25.2 Cable continuity and grounding |
186 | 25.3 Cable locations 25.4 Cable protection 25.5 Cable support and retention |
187 | 25.6 Cables—radius of bends 25.7 Cables through bulkheads, docks, beams, and so on 25.8 Cable pulling in force |
188 | 25.9 Cable rat proofing 25.10 Holes for cables 25.11 Cable splicing |
189 | 25.12 Propulsion cables 26. Interior communications systems 26.1 General |
190 | 26.2 Engine order telegraph system |
191 | 26.3 Rudder angle indicator |
192 | 26.4 Refrigerated and cold storage alarm system 26.5 General emergency alarm system |
197 | 26.6 Alarm system for lubricating oils, refrigeration, and other fluid systems 26.7 Voice communication systems |
202 | 27. Exterior communication and navigation systems 27.1 General 27.2 Safety |
203 | 27.3 General installation guidelines 27.4 Power supplies |
204 | 27.5 Radio interference 27.6 Antennas 27.7 Equipment installation guidelines |
205 | 28. Fire detection, alarm, and sprinkler systems |
206 | 28.1 General 28.2 Manual fire alarm systems 28.3 Automatic fire alarm systems |
207 | 28.4 Fire detection and fire alarm system for periodically unattended machinery spaces 28.5 Smoke extraction systems |
208 | 28.6 Detector types 28.7 Automatic sprinkler, fire detection, and fire alarm systems |
209 | 29. Watertight and fire door equipment 29.1 General 29.2 Watertight door systems |
211 | 29.3 Fire door holding and release systems |
212 | 30. Gyro compass systems 30.1 General 30.2 Installation and location |
213 | 30.3 Power supply 31. Electric propulsion and maneuvering system 31.1 Scope 31.2 Regulations 31.3 System requirements |
215 | 31.4 Prime movers for integrated power and propulsion plants 31.5 Generators for integrated power and propulsion plants |
217 | 31.6 Propulsion drive transformers |
219 | 31.7 Propulsion motors |
221 | 31.8 Propulsion power conversion equipment |
222 | 31.9 Main power switchboard 31.10 Propulsion control equipment |
225 | 31.11 Power management 31.12 Failure mode and effect analysis (FMEA) 31.13 Podded propulsion |
226 | 31.14 Propulsion cables 31.15 Tests |
227 | 31.16 Propulsion equipment location 31.17 Ventilation 31.18 Bed-plates and foundations |
228 | 31.19 Lubrication 31.20 Fire extinguishers 31.21 Protection during storage and installation 31.22 System operation and maintenance |
229 | 32. Steering systems 32.1 General |
230 | 32.2 Navigating bridge installation 32.3 Power supply 32.4 Alarm system 32.5 Steering gear |
231 | 32.6 Steering control systems |
233 | 33. Hazardous locations, installations, and equipment 33.1 General |
234 | 33.2 Hazardous area classification |
235 | 33.3 Area classification for various vessel types |
238 | 33.4 Hazardous location equipment |
239 | 33.5 Hazardous location equipment markings |
240 | 33.6 Approved equipment |
241 | 33.7 Wiring methods—hazardous locations |
243 | 33.8 Additional recommendations for tank vessels carrying bulk liquefied gas or ammonia 34. Ship tests 34.1 General |
245 | 34.2 New installations 34.3 Generating sets 34.4 Switchboards |
246 | 34.5 Motors and controllers |
247 | 34.6 Lighting 34.7 Communication systems 34.8 Steering system 34.9 Control systems |
248 | 34.10 Emergency electrical systems 34.11 Storage batteries 34.12 Electric heating systems 34.13 Voltage drop 34.14 Existing installations |
250 | 35. Spare Parts |
251 | Annex A (informative) General information on hazardous location classification and equipment |
258 | Annex B (informative) Circuit designations |
262 | Annex C (informative) Enclosures NEMA and IEC characteristics, designations, and comparison |
270 | Annex D (informative) Bibliography |