What happens in crane facilities in regions with extremely low temperatures? Does the maximum possible cable length of several hundred meters reduce through increase in damping at low temperatures, or does the cable break in extreme applications, for example at -40° C?
The sensitive glass fibers are conducted in a gel-filled hollow space. How does the gel behave in highly dynamic conditions and what happens in restarts after long downtimes? As no precise statement about this topic could be found in relevant technical journals, and as little was known particularly about the thermal features of the gel, igus®, as part of its philosophy, undertook own tests to determine the reliable specifications for applications in e-chain® systems.
For this task, the igus® test laboratory was equipped with a freezer that can generate constant temperatures of -40° C and a test facility was mounted for long travels up to 7 m for a speed of 1.6 m/s and an acceleration up to 6 m/s2.
The igus® gradient fiber glass cable CFLG.6G was tested. 50/125.TC. The cable was tested with a length of about 15 m as loop in an igus® e-chain system® 3500.125.200.0 with a radius of 200 mm.