pylon$65781$ - translation to greek
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pylon$65781$ - translation to greek

Long-distance anchor pylon; Branch pylon; Termination pylon; Switch pylon; Long distance anchor pylon; Anchor pylon; Deviation tower
  • Termination tower (overhead line to underground cable)
  • Two termination towers and one cable branch tower nearby
  • Future termination tower of a 110 kV-line while joins are installed

pylon      
n. πυλών, πυλώνας, στύλος για καλώδια
subway station         
  • Glass art in [[Formosa Boulevard metro station]] in [[Kaohsiung]], [[Taiwan]]
  • The entrance of the [[Times Square–42nd Street/Port Authority Bus Terminal station]], in New York City.
  • Signage directing passengers to the exit of a station on [[Vancouver]]'s [[Canada Line]]. Both a pictographic 'running man' [[exit sign]] and the written 'Way Out' signage point the way.
RAILWAY STATION OF A RAPID TRANSIT SYSTEM
Underground station; Subway station; Subway stop; Shallow column station; Deep column station; Pylon station; Single-vault station; Rapid transit station; Metro Station; Single vault station; Single vault deep underground station; Single-vault deep underground station; Two-level single-vault transfer station; Deep column-wall station; Shallow single-vault station; Underground Stations; Metro stations
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Definition

Pylon
·noun An Egyptian gateway to a large building (with or without flanking towers).
II. Pylon ·noun A low tower, having a truncated pyramidal form, and flanking an ancient Egyptian gateway.
III. Pylon ·add. ·noun Formerly, a starting derrick (the use of which is now abandoned) for an Aeroplane.
IV. Pylon ·add. ·noun A tower, commonly of steelwork, for supporting either end of a wire, as for a telegraph line, over a long span.
V. Pylon ·add. ·noun A post, tower, or the like, as on an aerodrome, or flying ground, serving to bound or mark a prescribed course of flight.

Wikipedia

Dead-end tower

A dead-end tower (also anchor tower, anchor pylon) is a fully self-supporting structure used in construction of overhead power lines. A dead-end transmission tower uses horizontal strain insulators at the end of conductors. Dead-end towers may be used at a substation as a transition to a "slack span" entering the equipment, when the circuit changes to a buried cable, when a transmission line changes direction by more than a few degrees, or at intervals along a straight run to limit the extent of a catastrophic collapse.

Since dead-end towers require more material and are heavier and costlier than suspension towers, it is uneconomic to build a line with only self-supporting structures.

Dead-end towers are used at regular intervals in a long transmission line to limit the cascading tower failures that might occur after a conductor failure. An in-line dead-end tower will have two sets of strain insulators supporting the lines in either direction, with the lines connected by a jumper between the two segments. Dead-end towers can resist unbalanced forces due to line weight and tension, contrasted with suspension towers which mostly just support the conductor weight and have relatively low capacity for unbalanced load. Dead-end towers may use earth anchor cables to compensate for the asymmetric attachment of the conductors. They are often used when the power line must cross a large gap, such as a railway line, river, or valley.

Dead-end towers may be constructed of the same materials as other structures of the line. They may be steel or aluminum lattice structures, tubular steel, concrete, or wood poles.