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Specification 50-19
2004
CONTENTS PAGE
FOREWORD .............................................................................................................................3
SCOPE .......................................................................................................................................3
Intentionally blank
Technical Specification 50-19
Page 3 Issue 1
2004
FOREWORD
This Technical Specification has been prepared by the Electricity Association. It is primarily
a reissue of British Electricity Boards Specification (B.E.B.S.) S12 (1964) together with
Amendment Sheet No.1 January 1969.
This specification defines a uniform system for identifying small wiring (conductors) for
transformers, switchgear, control and protection equipment.
The specification may be applied to the small wiring of protection and control panels from
the point of interface with primary parts or their mechanisms and ancilliary circuits.
To enable compatibility with existing installations the technical content of the original
specification has not therefore been altered.
The document has endeavoured to follow the format of the major International Standards.
SCOPE
This technical specification provides general rules for identification of individual wires
(“ferruling”) to denote its function in transformers, switchgear, control and protection
equipment using an alphanumeric notation.
This technical specification applies identification marks to small wiring of protection and
controlgear in LV compartments at the point of interface with transformers and/or
switchgear. Interface small wiring includes external auxiliary supplies, protection and
SCADA control circuits. This is for the purpose of electrical identification of individual
wires and provides the ability to trace through equipment for function checking and
faultfinding. Manufacturers may apply identification marks to small wiring complying with
other standards or to their own convention, at terminals which are not located at the point of
interface.
1.1 General
Each wire shall have a letter to denote its function, e.g. control of circuit breaker, current
transformer for primary protection, voltage for instruments metering and protection. A
number identifying the individual wire shall follow the function letter. Every branch of any
connection shall bear the same identification mark. Where it is necessary to identify
branches, which are commoned (e.g. current transformer leads), different identification marks
for the branches may be employed only if they are commoned through links, or are connected
to separate terminals, which are then commoned by removable connections. Suffix letters
shall be used as indicated in Section 1.4.
The complete list of reserved letters and numbers for small wire identification to designate
specific circuit functions are shown in Table 1.
Where part of a circuit is common to more than one function, the first in alphabetical order of
the appropriate function letters in the table shall be used for the common part. Where the
circuits split at a separable contact (e.g. fuse, link, switch or relay contact) the function letter
shall change if necessary from the splitting point onwards.
Circuits having functions not included in the function letter table shall not have prefix letters.
For example, circuits of devices, which provide a continuous indication, such as remote
winding temperature or resistance thermometers, shall not have a prefix letter unless the
circuit of the particular indication already has a function letter. Where, however, an
indication or alarm is initiated by opening or closing of an auxiliary contact prefix ‘L’ or ‘X’
should be used as appropriate.
Where the manufacturer has been unable to ascertain from the purchaser the function letters
and numbering assigned to equipment wiring at the time that wiring is required, the
manufacturer shall himself provide wire numbers preceded by the letter ‘O’. Where the
appropriate function letter only can be determined, it shall be preceded by an ‘O’ and
followed by the manufacturer’s own number. The same procedure may be applied to
equipment or parts of equipment not assigned to specific contracts at the time of manufacture,
subject to the purchaser’s approval and to use of ferruling in accordance with approved
standard diagrams as far as these are applicable.
Where relays are employed, the coil and the contact circuits do not necessarily bear the same
function letter; this should be determined by the function of the individual circuit, e.g. the coil
circuit of a series flag relay may be ‘K’ but the contact circuits may bear the letters such as
‘X’, ‘L’ or ‘N’ as appropriate.
Technical Specification 50-19
Page 5 Issue 1
2004
The following rules shall apply to current and voltage transformer function letters.
Prefix ‘C’ shall be used for all types of over-current protection (whether used as
primary or back-up protection), standby earth fault, generator negative phase
sequence, transformer winding temperature protection, and instruments fed from
separate current transformers. Where duplicate primary protection is applied prefix
‘A’ shall be used for both, the second line being distinguished by adding 300 to the
number.
The function letters shall follow through any interposing an auxiliary current and
voltage transformers, including such transformers when used for light current circuits,
provided these are not used for isolating transformers to couple circuits, which have
differing functions.
Where an a.c. supply, reflecting the primary quantities and derived from a current or
voltage transformer, is rectified for the operation of instruments or relays, the d.c.
circuit shall carry the same function letter as the a.c. circuit.
Prefix ‘D’ shall be used for these circuits, including the current side of the isolating
transformers. The connections to the voltage circuit from this transformer shall have
prefix ‘F’.
Light current equipment may require numbering schemes different from the above for
complete identification. In such cases, where connections from such equipment are
associated with power equipment wired in accordance with this specification, the numbering
of such connections shall include the appropriate prefix letter (J, W, X or Y) to distinguish
them. The letter ‘W’ is generally used for the light current side of interposing relays for
control purposes.
Technical Specification 50-19
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2004
The wire numbers may consist of one or more digits as required. For functions A-G, H, J and
M, the numbers shall be as given in the column under “Wire Numbers”. D.C. supplies from a
positive source shall bear odd numbers and d.c. supplies from a negative source shall bear
even numbers. Where coils or resistors are connected in series the change from odd to even
shall be made at the coil or resistor lead nearest to the negative supply.
Where similarly numbered leads from separate primary equipments are taken to a common
panel (e.g. bus zone protection, summation metering, banked transformers, etc.), suffixes A,
B and C, etc. should be used to distinguish them. Where similarly numbered leads from
different parts of a unit of primary equipment are taken to a common panel (e.g. generator
and unit transformers, HV and LV sides of a transformer, etc.), the leads of the subsidiary or
lower voltage equipment shall be distinguished by adding 500 to the wire numbers. When
more than two sets of leads require to be distinguished, specific wire numbering schemes
appropriate to the case shall be issued by means of a standard diagram showing the scheme to
be adopted. The method of distinguishing between sets of leads shall be shown on individual
schematic (circuit) and wiring diagrams.
The distinguishing suffixes or numbers apply only in the common panel or junction box, and
at each end of the interconnecting cores. When specified, however, suffixes may be omitted
from ends of the interconnecting cores remote from the common panel or junction box.
Technical Specification 50-19
Page 7 Issue 1
2004
N Tap change control, including AVC, tap position and Any number from 1
progress indications upwards
V Automatic switching circuits not integral with circuit Any number from 1
breaker control schemes, i.e. separately supplied or upwards
isolatable from, the circuit breaker control scheme
Y Telephones
* If, for functions A-G and for functions H, J and M, more numbers are required, add
multiples of one hundred (e.g. 10-29 may be extended to 110-129, 210-229, etc.)
Note: The term “remote selective control” denotes “control at a point distant from the
switchgear by the transmission of electrical signals through common communication
channels using selective means to operate one or a number of switching devices”.