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Electrical enclosure

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Electrical enclosures are usually made from rigid plastics, or metals such as steel, stainless steel, or aluminum. Steel cabinets may be painted or galvanized. Mass-produced equipment will generally have a customized enclosure, but standardized enclosures are made for custom-built or small production
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are both used for enclosure construction due to their high durability and corrosion resistance. These materials are also moisture resistant and chemical resistant. They are the strongest of the construction options. Carbon steel can be hot or cold rolled. Hot rolled carbon steel is used for stamping
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Telecommunication enclosures are fully assembled or modular field-assembled transportable structures capable of housing an electronic communications system. These enclosures provide a controlled internal environment for the communications equipment and occasional craftspeople. The enclosures are
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to equipment users and protect the contents from the environment. The enclosure is the only part of the equipment which is seen by users. It may be designed not only for its utilitarian requirements, but also to be pleasing to the eye. Regulations may dictate the features and performance of
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Stainless steel enclosures are suited for medical, pharma, and food industry applications since they are bacterial and fungal resistant due to their non-porous quality. Stainless steel enclosures may be specified to permit wash-down cleaning in, for example, food manufacturing areas.
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Metal cabinets may meet the conductivity requirements for electrical safety bonding and shielding of enclosed equipment from electromagnetic interference. Non-metallic enclosures may require additional installation steps to ensure metallic conduit systems are properly bonded.
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runs of equipment. For plastic enclosures ABS is used for indoor applications not in harsh environments. Polycarbonate, glass-reinforced, and fiberglass boxes are used where stronger cabinets are required, and may additionally have a gasket to exclude dust and moisture.
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used for electrical enclosures is strong but light, non-conductive and non-magnetic. It is also resistant to corrosion and some acidic environments; however, it is sensitive to abrasive cleaners. Polycarbonate is the easiest material to modify.
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Aluminum is chosen because of its light weight, relative strength, low cost, and corrosion resistance. It performs well in harsh environments and it is sturdy, capable of withstanding high impact with a high malleable strength.
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enclosures resist chemicals in corrosive applications. The material can be used over all indoor and outdoor temperature ranges. Fiberglass can be installed in environments that are constantly wet.
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designed with locks, security, and alarms to discourage access by unauthorized persons. Enclosures can be provided with a decorative facade to comply with local building requirements.
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and moderate forming applications. Cold rolled sheet is produced from low carbon steel and then cold reduced to a certain thickness and can meet ASTM A366 and ASTM A611 requirements.
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standards for the performance of various classes of electrical enclosures. The NEMA standards cover corrosion resistance, ability to protect from rain and submersion, etc.
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Enclosures for some purposes have partially punched openings (knockouts) which can be removed to accommodate
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Fire of an electrical cabinet (left : picture, right : simulation with
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protection, as well as functional, esthetic and commercial constraints.
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IEC IP definitions, and a comparison of IEC<>NEMA definitions
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What Is an Electrical Enclosure? Definition, Using, Requirements
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may place many demands on an enclosure for heat dissipation,
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Electro polished enclosure (control station), explosion-proof
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also acts as a shield against electromagnetic interference.
468:"Stainless Steel Electrical Enclosures Product Reference" 493:"FDS-SMV : Fire Dynamics Simulator - SmokeView" 66:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 27:"Knock-outs" redirects here. For other uses, see 535:National Institute of Standards and Technology 497:National Institute of Standards and Technology 374:that can be very intense (in the order of the 205:, such as petrochemical plants or coal mines. 238:National Electrical Manufacturers Association 8: 516:Research Gate - Groupe de Recherche Feux GDR 233:(ingress protection rating) of enclosures. 574:IP Protection Ratings vs. NEMA Equivalency 164:(PLC) installed in an electrical enclosure 126:Learn how and when to remove this message 434: 203:electrical equipment in hazardous areas 7: 337:, street cabinets or technically as 64:adding citations to reliable sources 370:Electrical enclosures are prone to 569:Electrical Enclosure with Terminal 25: 261:Stainless steel and carbon steel 150:A municipal electrical enclosure 40: 51:needs additional citations for 1: 162:programmable logic controller 510:Macqueron, Corentin (2017). 211:radio frequency interference 610: 236:In the United States, the 26: 529:McGrattan, Kevin (2016). 443:"Carbon Steel Enclosures" 29:Knockout (disambiguation) 364:Fire Dynamics Simulator 215:electrostatic discharge 557:March 4, 2016, at the 367: 339:serving area interface 165: 151: 143: 75:"Electrical enclosure" 594:Electrical enclosures 403:Housing (engineering) 361: 229:60529 classifies the 157: 149: 141: 18:Electrical enclosures 207:Electronic packaging 182:electronic equipment 170:electrical enclosure 60:improve this article 564:Types of Enclosures 242:NEMA enclosure type 368: 345:Telecommunications 166: 152: 144: 240:(NEMA) publishes 225:Internationally, 136: 135: 128: 110: 16:(Redirected from 601: 539: 538: 526: 520: 519: 507: 501: 500: 489: 483: 482: 480: 478: 464: 458: 457: 455: 453: 439: 393:Cable management 198:electrical shock 131: 124: 120: 117: 111: 109: 68: 44: 36: 21: 609: 608: 604: 603: 602: 600: 599: 598: 584: 583: 559:Wayback Machine 548: 543: 542: 528: 527: 523: 509: 508: 504: 491: 490: 486: 476: 474: 466: 465: 461: 451: 449: 447:BisonProfab.com 441: 440: 436: 431: 418:Utility box art 384: 356: 347: 319: 308: 296: 283: 270:stainless steel 263: 250: 223: 201:enclosures for 196:and to prevent 132: 121: 115: 112: 69: 67: 57: 45: 32: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 607: 605: 597: 596: 586: 585: 582: 581: 576: 571: 566: 561: 547: 546:External links 544: 541: 540: 521: 502: 484: 459: 433: 432: 430: 427: 426: 425: 420: 415: 410: 405: 400: 395: 390: 383: 380: 355: 352: 346: 343: 335:junction boxes 318: 315: 307: 304: 295: 292: 282: 279: 262: 259: 249: 246: 222: 219: 134: 133: 48: 46: 39: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 606: 595: 592: 591: 589: 580: 577: 575: 572: 570: 567: 565: 562: 560: 556: 553: 550: 549: 545: 536: 532: 525: 522: 517: 513: 506: 503: 498: 494: 488: 485: 473: 469: 463: 460: 448: 444: 438: 435: 428: 424: 423:Utility vault 421: 419: 416: 414: 411: 409: 406: 404: 401: 399: 396: 394: 391: 389: 386: 385: 381: 379: 377: 373: 365: 360: 353: 351: 344: 342: 340: 336: 332: 328: 324: 316: 314: 312: 305: 303: 300: 299:Polycarbonate 294:Polycarbonate 293: 291: 289: 280: 278: 274: 271: 267: 260: 258: 254: 247: 245: 243: 239: 234: 232: 228: 220: 218: 216: 212: 208: 204: 199: 195: 191: 187: 183: 179: 175: 171: 163: 160: 159:Allen Bradley 156: 148: 140: 130: 127: 119: 108: 105: 101: 98: 94: 91: 87: 84: 80: 77: –  76: 72: 71:Find sources: 65: 61: 55: 54: 49:This article 47: 43: 38: 37: 34: 30: 19: 534: 524: 515: 505: 496: 487: 475:. Retrieved 471: 462: 450:. Retrieved 446: 437: 388:19 inch rack 369: 348: 320: 309: 297: 284: 275: 266:Carbon steel 264: 255: 251: 235: 224: 169: 167: 122: 113: 103: 96: 89: 82: 70: 58:Please help 53:verification 50: 33: 317:Terminology 472:Adalet.com 429:References 327:connectors 311:Fiberglass 306:Fiberglass 178:electrical 86:newspapers 413:Telco can 408:Rack unit 354:Fire risk 248:Materials 221:Standards 184:to mount 588:Category 555:Archived 398:DIN rail 382:See also 376:megawatt 331:conduits 288:Aluminum 281:Aluminum 231:IP Codes 194:displays 186:switches 116:May 2023 477:June 9, 452:June 9, 174:cabinet 100:scholar 323:cables 102:  95:  88:  81:  73:  372:fires 329:, or 190:knobs 172:is a 107:JSTOR 93:books 479:2023 454:2023 268:and 213:and 192:and 176:for 79:news 227:IEC 180:or 168:An 62:by 590:: 533:. 514:. 495:. 470:. 445:. 341:. 325:, 188:, 537:. 518:. 499:. 481:. 456:. 366:) 129:) 123:( 118:) 114:( 104:· 97:· 90:· 83:· 56:. 31:. 20:)

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Electrical enclosures
Knockout (disambiguation)

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Allen Bradley
programmable logic controller
cabinet
electrical
electronic equipment
switches
knobs
displays
electrical shock
electrical equipment in hazardous areas
Electronic packaging
radio frequency interference
electrostatic discharge
IEC

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