Wow thats completely different than what I have ever seen in the USA. I have
never encountered clay pipe or tar before.. Well aside from tar like
substance inside of the waterproofing housing for crimps..
About 20 years ago I was working on a factory site, when there was a
muffled pop and the lights went out, the factory grinding to a halt.
Out in the yard was a transformer and switch gear inside a brick
enclosure. No obvious signs of damage. The electricity board
engineers showed up and started to inspect the area.
Suddenly without any warning one of the engineers had one leg disappear
up to his knee through the tarmac. The surface had collapsed under his
weight into a cavity right where the cable had blown out. It took
several days to fix.
They put in a new transformer and feed cable. They used a hydraulic
crimping machine to make the joints in the cables, then potted the
whole lot in epoxy resin. I still have a new unused resin pack that I
was given from that repair. Must be well out of date by now... ;-)
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Best Regards:
Baron.