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Worked Example: Mining Trailing Cable — 500 m Dragline Supply at 11 kV

Step-by-step medium-voltage trailing cable sizing for a 35 MW dragline excavator in an open-cut coal mine. Covers soil thermal resistivity, cyclic loading, IEC 60287 thermal circuit method, and why mine spoil conditions force 2-3x cable upsizing compared to standard tables.

AS/NZS 300826 min readUpdated March 3, 2026
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Scenario

ParameterValue
EquipmentDragline excavator, 35 MW rated (walking dragline, open-cut coal mine)
Supply voltage11 kV three-phase, 50 Hz
Maximum demand28 MW at 0.85 PF lagging (peak digging cycle)
Average demand18 MW at 0.88 PF lagging (typical operating cycle)
Cable route length500 m (from pit-edge switchyard to dragline tail)
Cable configurationSingle trailing cable, three-core with earth screen, on ground surface and partially buried
Burial depth0 m (surface) to 1.5 m (buried under spoil in active mining areas)
Surface ambient temperature45°C (outback Australian summer, direct sun on dark spoil)
Spoil temperature at 1.5 m depth35°C
Soil thermal resistivity (native ground)1.0 K·m/W (typical clay/loam)
Soil thermal resistivity (mine spoil)3.5 K·m/W (dry, broken rock and coal fines)
Soil thermal resistivity (worst case, dry spoil)5.0 K·m/W (measured in summer drought)
Cable typeEPR insulated, copper conductor, 90°C rated, trailing cable construction
Cable screenCopper wire braid, rated for earth fault current
Mining standardAS/NZS 1802 (AU), IEC 60502-2 (international), NEC 590 + 340 (US mining)

This example reveals the single most underestimated parameter in mining cable design: soil thermal resistivity. Standard cable sizing assumes soil thermal resistivity of 1.0 K·m/W (the IEC reference value for moderately moist clay). Mine spoil — the broken rock, overburden, and coal fines that fill active mining areas — has a thermal resistivity of 2.5 to 5.0 K·m/W when dry. This 2.5–5× difference can force a cable upsize of 2–3 cross-section steps, adding hundreds of thousands of dollars to the cable cost.

Step 1: Calculate Full-Load Current

For an 11 kV three-phase supply at maximum demand:

IFL = P / (√3 × V × PF) — (Eq. 1)

IFL = 28,000,000 / (√3 × 11,000 × 0.85)

IFL = 28,000,000 / 16,187

IFL = 1,730 A

For average demand:

Iavg = 18,000,000 / (√3 × 11,000 × 0.88) — (Eq. 2)

Iavg = 18,000,000 / 16,764

Iavg = 1,074 A

The cable must be rated for the maximum demand current of 1,730 A, which occurs during the peak digging cycle (bucket loaded, hoisting at full speed, simultaneous swing).

Cyclic Loading Factor

The dragline operates in a repetitive cycle of approximately 60 seconds. The RMS current over the cycle determines the cable thermal loading:

IRMS = √((Ipeak² × tpeak + Ihigh² × thigh + Imed² × tmed + Ilow² × tlow) / Ttotal) — (Eq. 3)

Using typical cycle profile:

PhaseCurrent (A)Duration (s)
Peak (dig)1,73010
High (hoist)1,40015
Medium (swing)1,10020
Low (dump/lower)60015

IRMS = √((1,730² × 10 + 1,400² × 15 + 1,100² × 20 + 600² × 15) / 60)

IRMS = √((29,929,000 + 29,400,000 + 24,200,000 + 5,400,000) / 60)

IRMS = √(88,929,000 / 60)

IRMS = √(1,482,150)

IRMS = 1,218 A

The RMS current of 1,218 A represents the sustained thermal equivalent of the cyclic loading. Some standards permit sizing the cable for the RMS current rather than the peak current when the duty cycle is well-defined.

Step 2: Baseline Cable Sizing — Standard Soil Conditions (1.0 K.m/W)

First, size the cable assuming the IEC reference soil thermal resistivity of 1.0 K·m/W to establish a baseline.

AS/NZS 1802:2019 — Electric Cables for Mining

AS/NZS 1802 Clause 5.3 specifies current ratings for mining trailing cables. Reference conditions: 40°C ambient, in air.

Ambient temperature correction (k1):

From AS/NZS 3008 Table 22 (referenced by AS/NZS 1802), Row 45°C, Column 90°C EPR:

k1 = 0.95

Installation correction — surface lay:

Trailing cable on ground surface, direct sun. AS/NZS 1802 Clause 5.3.2.1 specifies a solar radiation derating factor:

ksolar = 0.90

No grouping (single trailing cable): k2 = 1.00

Combined derating (surface):

ktotal,surface = 0.95 × 0.90 = 0.855 — (Eq. 4a)

Required ampacity for peak demand:

Iz = 1,730 / 0.855 = 2,024 A

Required ampacity for RMS (cyclic duty):

Iz,RMS = 1,218 / 0.855 = 1,424 A

From AS/NZS 1802 Table 5.1 (trailing cable, 11 kV, three-core EPR copper, in air):

Cable Size (mm²)Rating in air (A)For peak demandFor RMS duty
300 mm²1,520 AFAILPASS
400 mm²1,750 AFAILPASS
500 mm²1,980 AFAILPASS
630 mm²2,180 APASSPASS

For peak demand: 630 mm² (surface lay, standard soil, air ratings).

For RMS cyclic duty: 300 mm² (if cyclic rating is accepted).

IEC 60502-2 — Power Cables with Extruded Insulation (6 kV to 30 kV)

IEC 60502-2, Table C.1 provides current ratings for three-core cables. Reference conditions: 30°C ambient, in air.

Ambient temperature correction:

From IEC 60364-5-52 Table B.52.14, Row 45°C, Column 90°C EPR:

Ca = 0.87

Solar radiation derating:

ksolar = 0.90 (consistent with AS/NZS)

Combined derating:

Ctotal = 0.87 × 0.90 = 0.783 — (Eq. 4b)

Required ampacity:

Iz = 1,730 / 0.783 = 2,210 A

From IEC 60502-2 Table C.1 (three-core, 11 kV, EPR, copper, in air at 30°C):

Cable SizeRating (A)Result
500 mm²2,010 AFAIL
630 mm²2,260 APASS (2,260 ≥ 2,210)

IEC selection: 630 mm² (same as AS/NZS for surface conditions).

NEC — Mining Applications

For mining applications, NEC Article 590 (Temporary Installations) and MSHA 30 CFR Part 75 govern cable selection.

Temperature correction for 45°C ambient from NEC Table 310.60(C)(4):

Ca = 0.90 (40°C base, 90°C insulation)

Combined with solar correction:

Ctotal = 0.90 × 0.90 = 0.810 — (Eq. 4c)

Iz = 1,730 / 0.810 = 2,136 A

From NEC Table 310.60(C)(69), three-core shielded MV cable in air:

SizeRating (A)Result
500 kcmil (253 mm²)1,610 AFAIL
750 kcmil (380 mm²)1,990 AFAIL
1000 kcmil (507 mm²)2,190 APASS (2,190 ≥ 2,136)

NEC selection for surface: 1000 kcmil (507 mm²).

Step 3: Cable Sizing Under Actual Mine Spoil Conditions — The Critical Step

Now recalculate for the actual burial conditions: cable partially buried in mine spoil at 1.5 m depth with soil thermal resistivity of 3.5 K·m/W (measured average) and 5.0 K·m/W (worst-case dry summer).

The burial derating fundamentally changes the cable selection. The cable’s current rating when buried is a function of the thermal circuit from conductor to ambient, and soil thermal resistivity is the dominant thermal resistance in this circuit.

IEC 60287 Thermal Circuit Method

The cable current rating when buried is calculated using the IEC 60287 methodology:

I = √((θc − θa) / (Rc × (T1 + T2 + T3 + T4))) — (Eq. 5)

Where:

SymbolMeaning
θcMaximum conductor temperature (90°C for EPR)
θaAmbient soil temperature at burial depth (35°C)
T1Thermal resistance of insulation
T2Thermal resistance of bedding/screen
T3Thermal resistance of outer serving
T4Thermal resistance of soil = (ρsoil / (2 × π)) × ln(2 × D / de)

For a 630 mm² three-core 11 kV cable: overall cable diameter de ≈ 125 mm, burial depth D = 1.5 m.

T4 at different soil thermal resistivities:

T4 = (ρsoil / (2 × π)) × ln(2 × 1.5 / 0.125) — (Eq. 6)

T4 = (ρsoil / 6.283) × ln(24)

T4 = ρsoil × 0.506

Soil Conditionρ (K·m/W)T4 (K·m/W)Relative to Reference
IEC reference (moist clay)1.00.5061.0×
Mine spoil (average)3.51.7713.5×
Mine spoil (dry summer)5.02.5305.0×
Saturated clay (wet season)0.70.3540.7×

Approximate Derating Factor for Soil Thermal Resistivity

For a cable where T4 is approximately 50% of total thermal resistance:

ksoil = √(Ttotal,ref / Ttotal,actual) — (Eq. 7)

ksoil(3.5) = √(1.012 / 2.277) = √(0.444) = 0.667

ksoil(5.0) = √(1.012 / 3.036) = √(0.333) = 0.577

630 mm² cable ratings adjusted for mine spoil:

ConditionBase Rating (buried, 1.0 K·m/W)ksoilDerated RatingStatus vs 1,730 A
Reference soil (1.0 K·m/W)1,540 A1.0001,540 AFAIL
Average mine spoil (3.5 K·m/W)1,540 A0.6671,027 AFAIL
Dry mine spoil (5.0 K·m/W)1,540 A0.577889 AFAIL

The 630 mm² cable that was adequate on the surface (2,180 A in air) is dramatically inadequate when buried in mine spoil. At 3.5 K·m/W, its buried rating drops to only 1,027 A — 59% of the required 1,730 A.

Solutions for Mine Spoil Burial

For peak demand (1,730 A) buried at 1.5 m in 3.5 K·m/W spoil:

Iz,required = 1,730 / ksoil(3.5) = 1,730 / 0.667 = 2,594 A (equivalent rating in reference soil)

No standard three-core 11 kV trailing cable exists at this rating. The maximum standard size is typically 630 mm² (rated approximately 1,540 A buried in reference soil).

Solution options:

1. Parallel cables: Use two parallel 500 mm² cables, each carrying 865 A. At 3.5 K·m/W, a single 500 mm² cable buried has a derated rating of approximately 890 A. Two cables in parallel: 2 × 890 = 1,780 A. PASS (barely).

2. Thermal backfill: Replace the mine spoil around the cable with controlled thermal backfill (CBS: cement-bound sand) with thermal resistivity of 0.75–1.0 K·m/W. This restores the cable rating to near-reference conditions.

3. Route on surface: Keep the cable on the surface where air cooling provides much higher ratings (2,180 A for 630 mm²). Standard practice for dragline trailing cables but not always possible in active pit areas.

4. Use RMS cyclic rating: If the mine accepts sizing for the RMS duty cycle current (1,218 A) rather than the peak demand:

Iz,RMS,buried = 1,218 / 0.667 = 1,826 A (reference soil equivalent)

A single 630 mm² cable with buried reference rating of 1,540 A still fails. But with the cyclic duty credit and partial surface routing, the solution may be feasible.

Step 4: Voltage Drop at 500 m

At 11 kV and 500 m, voltage drop is significant even for MV cables:

ΔV = √3 × I × L × (r × cos(φ) + x × sin(φ)) / 1000 — (Eq. 8)

630 mm², 500 m, 1,730 A, PF 0.85:

From IEC 60502-2, 630 mm², 11 kV, three-core:

r = 0.0366 mΩ/m (at 90°C), x = 0.080 mΩ/m

ΔV = 1.732 × 1,730 × 500 × (0.0366 × 0.85 + 0.080 × 0.527) / 1000

ΔV = 1,497,580 × (0.0311 + 0.0422) / 1000

ΔV = 109.8 V = 1.00% (of 11,000 V)

Within the typical mining limit of 5%. PASS.

Parallel 500 mm² cables (each carrying 865 A):

reff = 0.0463 / 2 = 0.0232 mΩ/m, xeff = 0.080 / 2 = 0.040 mΩ/m

ΔV = 1.732 × 1,730 × 500 × (0.0232 × 0.85 + 0.040 × 0.527) / 1000

ΔV = 1,497,580 × 0.0408 / 1000

ΔV = 61.1 V = 0.56%

Lower voltage drop, as expected for the larger total cross-section.

Step 5: Short Circuit Withstand

The cable must withstand the prospective short-circuit current at the pit-edge switchyard for the duration of the protection clearance time.

Typical mining 11 kV fault level: 250 MVA (Isc = 13.1 kA). Protection clearance time: 0.5 seconds.

Adiabatic equation for 630 mm² copper, EPR (k = 143):

k² × S² = I² × t — (Eq. 9)

Imax = k × S / √t = 143 × 630 / √(0.5) = 90,090 / 0.707 = 127,405 A

The cable can withstand 127.4 kA for 0.5 seconds, far exceeding the 13.1 kA fault level. PASS.

For parallel 500 mm² cables:

Imax = 143 × 500 / √(0.5) = 71,500 / 0.707 = 101,100 A

Still far exceeds 13.1 kA. PASS.

Step 6: Earth Fault Screen Rating

The copper wire braid screen must carry earth fault current for the protection clearance time. For a mine 11 kV system:

Earth fault current (solid): Ief = 500 A (restricted earth fault, Petersen coil earthed system). Clearance time: 2.0 seconds.

Sscreen = Ief × √t / k = 500 × √(2.0) / 143 — (Eq. 10)

Sscreen = 500 × 1.414 / 143

Sscreen = 4.95 mm²

A minimum 6 mm² equivalent copper wire braid screen is required. Standard mining trailing cables typically have 16–25 mm² screen cross-section, providing ample margin. PASS.

Result Summary — Surface vs Buried

ParameterSurface (AS/NZS)Buried 3.5 K·m/WBuried 5.0 K·m/W
Required ampacity2,024 A2,594 A3,000 A
Single 630 mm² rating2,180 A PASS1,027 A FAIL889 A FAIL
SolutionSingle 630 mm²2 × 500 mm² parallel2 × 630 mm² or thermal backfill
Voltage drop1.00%0.56% (parallel)0.50% (parallel)
Copper weight (500 m)8,395 kg13,350 kg (2 cables)16,790 kg (2 cables)
Approx cable cost (AUD)$350,000$560,000$700,000

Multi-Standard Comparison

AspectAS/NZS 1802IEC 60502-2NEC 590 + 310.60
Reference ambient (air)40°C30°C40°C
Reference ambient (ground)25°C20°C20°C
Reference soil resistivity1.2 K·m/W1.0 K·m/W1.0 K·m/W (NEC Table 310.60)
Temp derating at 45°C (air)0.950.870.90
Surface cable size630 mm²630 mm²1000 kcmil (507 mm²)
Soil resistivity correction methodAS/NZS 3008 Table 28IEC 60287 calculationNEC 310.60(C)(4) factors
Explicit mine spoil guidanceYes (AS/NZS 1802 Cl. 5.3.3)No (engineer must calculate)No (MSHA site-specific)
Cyclic loading creditYes (AS/NZS 1802 Cl. 5.3.4)Yes (IEC 60853)Not explicit for mining
Cable for 3.5 K·m/W burial2 × 500 mm²2 × 500 mm²2 × 750 kcmil
Cost differential (buried vs surface)1.6×1.6×1.7×

Key Insight

The key finding in this example is that soil thermal resistivity at mining depth completely dominates cable selection — and most engineers use the wrong value by a factor of 2 to 5×. Standard cable rating tables assume soil thermal resistivity of 1.0 K·m/W, which represents moderately moist clay. But mine spoil is neither undisturbed, nor clay, nor moist.

Mine spoil consists of broken rock fragments, coal fines, sand, and overburden material that has been excavated, trucked, and dumped in loose fill. The void spaces between fragments are filled with air (an excellent thermal insulator), and in arid mining regions, the moisture content can drop to near zero during summer drought. Measured thermal resistivities of mine spoil range from 2.5 K·m/W (typical, slightly moist) to 5.0 K·m/W (dry summer) to as high as 7.0 K·m/W (completely desiccated coal fines).

The practical impact is devastating: a cable sized using the standard 1.0 K·m/W reference value has a buried current rating that is 45–70% too high. A 630 mm² cable that the tables say can carry 1,540 A buried can actually only carry 889–1,027 A in mine spoil. If the engineer does not perform a site-specific thermal resistivity survey (which costs approximately $5,000–10,000), the cable will overheat, the EPR insulation will degrade, and the cable will eventually fail.

AS/NZS 1802 is the only standard among the three that explicitly addresses mine spoil thermal resistivity with specific guidance (Clause 5.3.3). IEC 60502-2 provides the calculation methodology (via IEC 60287) but leaves the soil resistivity value entirely to the engineer. NEC provides correction factors in Table 310.60(C)(4) but does not address mine spoil specifically.

The cost implication is enormous: going from a single 630 mm² cable ($350,000) to parallel 500 mm² cables ($560,000) represents a 60% cost increase — approximately $210,000 in additional cable for a single dragline feed. For a mine with 10 draglines, each with 2–3 trailing cables, the total additional cable cost can exceed $4 million. Against this, the cost of a cable failure (unplanned dragline downtime at $200,000–500,000 per day, cable replacement, potential fire risk in the pit) is far greater. The $5,000–10,000 soil thermal resistivity survey is among the highest-ROI engineering investments in mining electrical design.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Three factors compound to make mine spoil a poor thermal conductor. First, the material has been mechanically broken from its original rock mass, creating void spaces between fragments that are filled with air. Air has a thermal resistivity of approximately 40 K·m/W — 40 times worse than moist soil. Even 10% air voids can double the bulk thermal resistivity. Second, the spoil is deposited in loose fill without compaction, so the void fraction remains high indefinitely. Third, in arid mining regions, moisture — which serves as a thermal bridge between solid particles — evaporates from the upper layers, leaving dry material with thermal contact only through point-to-point solid contacts. The combination produces thermal resistivities of 3.5-7.0 K·m/W, compared to 0.7-1.2 K·m/W for undisturbed, moist native ground.
Thermal backfill (cement-bound sand, CBS, or controlled low-strength material, CLSM) can achieve thermal resistivities of 0.5-1.0 K·m/W, effectively restoring the cable rating to reference conditions. For a 500 m dragline feed, this requires approximately 375 m³ of backfill at a delivered cost of approximately $80-150 per m³, or $30,000-56,000 total. This is far cheaper than the $210,000 cost of parallel cables. However, the cable route moves as the dragline advances across the pit. A permanent backfill trench is only viable for the fixed section between the pit-edge switchyard and the first cable reel. The trailing section (which moves with the dragline) cannot use backfill. This hybrid approach — backfilled fixed section plus surface-rated trailing section — is the standard solution for large dragline installations.
AS/NZS 1802 Clause 5.3.4 and IEC 60853 allow the cable to be sized for the RMS (root-mean-square) current of the load cycle rather than the peak current, provided the load cycle is well-defined and repeats with a period much shorter than the cable's thermal time constant (typically 1-4 hours for large buried cables). For a dragline with a 60-second digging cycle, the thermal time constant is much longer than the cycle period, so the cable conductor temperature follows the RMS current, not the peak. In our example, this reduces the sizing current from 1,730 A (peak) to 1,218 A (RMS) — a 30% reduction that can save one cable size step. However, most mining electrical engineers are reluctant to apply it because the cycle profile can change with different digging conditions or operational changes. Conservative practice is to size for the peak demand with a notation that the cyclic credit provides additional thermal margin.

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