Products

Crane Span Structure Cable Tray

Core Advantages
  • Efficient Cable Protection
    Physical Protection: Metal or non-metal enclosures prevent mechanical damage, rodent/insect attacks, and foreign object intrusion. Fire-resistant trays use flame-retardant materials, meeting 1–3 hour fire ratings per building codes (e.g., GB50016).
    Environmental Adaptability: Anti-corrosion treatments (hot-dip galvanizing, powder coating, zinc-nickel plating) suit humid, salty, or chemical environments. Explosion-proof designs meet safety needs in flammable settings (e.g., gas stations, chemical plants).
  • Optimized Cable Management
    Orderly Routing: Internal partitions separate power, control, and communication cables, reducing electromagnetic interference. Multi-layer setups maximize vertical space, ideal for dense installations.
    Flexible Expansion: Modular design allows on-site cutting and assembly, adapting to complex layouts. Reserved space simplifies future cable additions without rework.
  • Efficient Heat Dissipation & Easy Maintenance
    Heat Dissipation: Mesh trays offer 65–80% ventilation, speeding heat release and reducing insulation aging. Perforated trays and optional forced ventilation further improve cooling.
    Maintenance Ease: Ladder trays’ open design allows easy inspection and fault detection; trough trays with removable covers support live maintenance (with insulation protection).
  • Cost Efficiency
    Lower Initial Costs: Standardized production reduces unit costs (steel trays ~RMB 20–200/m; fiberglass slightly higher but longer-lasting). Compared to buried or conduit systems, trays are more cost-effective over long runs.
    Low Life-Cycle Costs: Galvanized steel trays last 20–30 years, aluminum 15–25 years, with minimal maintenance (5–10% of initial cost).
  • Efficient Installation & Safety
    Fast Installation: Prefabricated, bolted components eliminate welding, cutting installation time by 60% vs. trenches. Lightweight designs (aluminum ~⅓ steel weight) ease overhead work.
    Reliable Grounding: Systems connect via grounding wires (e.g., 4mm² copper braid) to building ground, ensuring ≤4Ω resistance for lightning and leakage protection.

Application Industry

Definition and Application Scenarios: A cable tray is a cable support system composed of brackets, arms, and installation accessories. It is used to support and protect various types of cables—such as power, control, and communication cables—and is widely applied in construction, power plants, chemical industries, metallurgy, data centers, and rail transit systems. Its core functions are to provide physical support for cable routing while meeting requirements for fire protection, moisture resistance, heat dissipation, and ease of inspection and maintenance.

Main Features:

  1. Diverse Types: By structure: trough type (fully enclosed), tray type (semi-enclosed), ladder type (open), mesh type (perforated). By material: steel, aluminum alloy, stainless steel, fiberglass-reinforced plastic (FRP), etc.
  2. Standardized Specifications: Common widths: 100–1200 mm; heights: 50–200 mm; non-standard sizes customizable. Sheet thickness: 1.0–3.0 mm (depending on load requirements).
  3. Specialized Functions: Extended product lines include fire-resistant trays, explosion-proof trays, anti-corrosion trays, and seismic-resistant trays (compliant with seismic design standard GB50981).
  4. Cross-Industry Applications: Power industry: cable transmission; Data centers: structured cabling; Chemical industry: explosion-proof cable protection; Rail transit: tunnel cable routing.
  5. Typical Types and Application Scenarios
  6. By Structure
  • Trough-Type Cable Tray: Features:Fully enclosed design, excellent dustproof and interference resistance. Applications: Suitable for low-voltage signal cables such as communication and computer cables, or sensitive signal cables requiring strict shielding (e.g., medical equipment wiring).
  • Tray-Type Cable Tray: Features:Flat bottom with side barriers, better heat dissipation than trough type. Applications: Mixed routing of power and control cables, ideal for factory workshops and vertical shafts in high-rise buildings.
  • Ladder-Type Cable Tray: Features:Open structure, lightweight, excellent heat dissipation and mechanical performance. Applications: Large-diameter cables (e.g., high-voltage cables), heavy load scenarios (e.g., metallurgical industry), or circuits requiring frequent maintenance.
  • Mesh-Type Cable Tray: Features:Metal mesh structure with high ventilation, flexible installation. Applications: Server room cabling in data centers, variable-frequency cables with high heat dissipation requirements.
  1. By Material
  • Steel Cable Tray: Features:High strength, low cost, but relatively poor corrosion resistance (requires regular maintenance). Applications: General indoor and outdoor environments (e.g., office buildings, warehouses).
  • Aluminum Alloy Cable Tray: Features:Lightweight and corrosion-resistant without additional treatment, but higher in cost. Applications: Coastal areas, high-humidity environments (e.g., swimming pools, laboratories).
  • Fiberglass Cable Tray: Features:Insulating, acid/alkali resistant, aging-resistant, and lightweight. Applications: Corrosive environments in chemical and pharmaceutical industries, or flammable/explosive areas (non-conductive)

Precautions

  1. Load Calculation: Select the sheet thickness based on the total cable weight and tray span (typically 1.5–3 meters per span) to prevent overload deformation. (For example, when laying 30 YJV-4×120 cables, a 2.0 mm thick tray-type cable tray should be used.)
  2. Environmental Adaptation: For outdoor or exposed environments, choose waterproof cable trays (e.g., trough-type trays with rain covers). In high-temperature environments (e.g., boiler rooms), use heat-resistant materials such as stainless steel 310S.
  3. Fire Protection Requirements: When passing through firewalls or floor slabs, the gaps between the cable tray and the building structure must be sealed with fireproof putty or fire-resistant boards to comply with the fire protection acceptance standard GB50166.
  4. Grounding and Bonding: Non-galvanized cable trays must be bonded with copper grounding wires between segments. For galvanized trays, bonding can be omitted if at least two connecting bolts are used and the contact surfaces are free of coating.

Conclusion:

As a core infrastructure for modern cable routing, cable trays offer significant advantages in cable protection, operational efficiency, and total lifecycle cost reduction through structural innovation and functional specialization. With the ongoing development of smart buildings and the new energy industry, future cable trays will evolve toward lightweight designs (e.g., use of composite materials), intelligent features (e.g., integrated temperature monitoring sensors), and eco-friendly solutions (e.g., increased use of recycled materials), further meeting the industry's needs for low-carbon and digital transformation.
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