Storm-Safe, designed in SolidWorks, reduces damage, power outage time, and electrocution risk
- Details
- Created on November 13, 2007
This fearsome scenario plagued hundreds of thousands of Midwesterners last year and prompted The Homac Companies, a utility connector manufacturer in Florida, to design an entirely new, safer way for homes to connect to power lines. Storm-Safe®, designed entirely in SolidWorks® 3D CAD software, is a simple “breakaway link” fixed to a utility pole that automatically disconnects cables from poles under abnormal stresses. Because the cables disconnect on the pole side, not at the home, the fallen wire carries no current. When the storm subsides, a new link is quickly installed, allowing utility workers to plug in the cables, energize the home, and be on their way.
“Storm-Safe minimizes damage to both the home and utility, containing damage to a single breakaway link, ensuring fallen wires aren’t energized, and compressing the power recovery process to mere minutes,” said Jim Zahnen, senior product development engineer for Homac. “This is an industry first and something that is gaining worldwide interest from our international utilities customers. It’s good business and it’s good for customers. SolidWorks software helped us visualize the design, refine it with internal and customer feedback, and quickly develop the necessary engineering drawings for each configuration, a process that couldn’t happen with our old 2D software. SolidWorks is helping us work more productively, especially in developing configurations of new products, and the transition from 2D has been surprisingly intuitive.”
Storm-Safe comes in configurations to serve one, two, or three homes and is rated for 200 amp service.
www.solidworks.com
Perspectives
What do sensors add to a decision support system?
An often-quoted Business Week article from 1999 stated that, “In the next century, planet Earth will don an electric skin…”...
Is it time for focused publications that aim to make sense of change at both the global and local scales?
Change is a constant that is inevitable, but what isn't inevitable are disruptive impacts. The more we know about our...
GeoEye Proposes to Purchase DigitalGlobe
The mergers and acquisitions within the geospatial technology space are white hot right now, with news Friday that GeoEye approached...
Why did Trimble buy SketchUp, and why did Google sell?
It’s funny, my first reaction to the Trimble buys SketchUp news was that it was some kind of spoof, and...
If Enhanced View cuts come, why not remove resolution restrictions?
A feature in the New York Times outlines the battle that is brewing in Congress to defend the use of...
Latest Events
| Mon May 28 Brazil - MundoGEO#Connect 2012 |
| Tue May 29 UK - European Earth Surface Process Group |
| Tue May 29 US - UCGIS 2012 Spring Symposium - GIScience 2.0 |
| Sat Jun 02 Germany - Resilient Cities 2012 |
| Mon Jun 04 @02:00 - 11:00AM US - Hexagon 2012 |
| Mon Jun 04 @08:00 - 05:00PM Denmark - GMES in Action Conference |
| Tue Jun 05 South Africa - Smart Cities Conference |
| Tue Jun 05 @02:00 - 11:00AM US - Eyeo Festival |
| Tue Jun 05 @08:00 - 05:00PM Denmark - GMES in Action Conference |
| Sun Jun 10 Taiwan - The International Summer School on Mobile Mapping Technologies 2012 |
Current Readers
Vector1 Media
Pubishers of Sensors & Systems, Informed Infrastructure, and Asian Surveying & Mapping.

