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Multi strand shielded cable questions

Walkers

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I have a piece of equipment that has a FWD/RVS pedal controller with a stop switch. I dropped a heavy wide flange beam on the cable and smashed it flat. The cable is 7 strands of 16 gauge stranded wire inside a jacket covered with armor (like Mac cable) covered with a light rubber jacket. Any idea what this cable is called, or how to source it?
 
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jeepxj

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similar
 
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Walkers

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I looked at that cable, which spawned some new search terms. I have now found some similar cables and for only $4,700 I can have a spool of it. I need 10’.
 

WhoWhatNow

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$10.72 per foot

Standard Electrical Wire, Shielded, Seven 16-Gauge Wires

 

jeepxj

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I looked at that cable, which spawned some new search terms. I have now found some similar cables and for only $4,700 I can have a spool of it. I need 10’.

what voltage we talking here?
 
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wyliesdiesels

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I said LFMC, not LFNC. It's metal clad for a reason.
that doesnt mean the proper shielding is provided to the conductor. induced EMF could be carried on the metal portion of the conduit causing interference on the signal wiring. this could cause erratic operation of the machine which you dont want. most shielded control cables have a specific terminal to terminate the shield on and its not just the machine housing
 

rlitman

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that doesnt mean the proper shielding is provided to the conductor. induced EMF could be carried on the metal portion of the conduit causing interference on the signal wiring. this could cause erratic operation of the machine which you dont want. most shielded control cables have a specific terminal to terminate the shield on and its not just the machine housing
Such a terminal would be simply to supply ground continuity to the board, but a solid metal barrier provides shielding regardless. Most coaxial (where shielding really does matter) RF connections I see simply bond the shield to the case, because that's all you need. And actually, it works better that way than any other way.

If you must populate that terminal, run a bare wire through the conduit to it. But many shielded systems (such as RD-485) only get bonded on one end anyway.

There's no mention above about impedance (where the configuration of the shield does matter), just shielding.
 
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Walkers

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I don’t think emf is really a problem, it is just 2 foot switches and a stop switch. The metal armor isn’t carrying and current, as I cut it off to splice the thing back together, and mine doesn’t have any emf shielding, just the wires and rubber jackets.
 

jeepxj

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I don’t think emf is really a problem, it is just 2 foot switches and a stop switch. The metal armor isn’t carrying and current, as I cut it off to splice the thing back together, and mine doesn’t have any emf shielding, just the wires and rubber jackets.

so my cable would be find then if you're just splicing in the middle with its one size up on conductors.
 
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