Iec60445 e PDF
Iec60445 e PDF
Iec60445 e PDF
ITU-T L.1203
TELECOMMUNICATION (02/2016)
STANDARDIZATION SECTOR
OF ITU
Summary
Recommendation ITU-T L.1203 defines the requirements and guidelines for DC power distribution
identification by colour and marking in Telecom/ICT installations (wire, cables, electric distribution
boards, interconnections, etc.). It avoids confusion and errors between the different AC and DC power
interfaces and distributions used in buildings and inside Telecom/ICT systems, as 400 VDC power
feeding interfaces standardized in Recommendation ITU-T L.1200 is used more, increasing power
density of ICT equipment, energy efficiency, simplified reliable power feeding architecture, costs
optimisation, etc. Recommendation ITU-T L.1203 supports the progressive introduction of up to
400 VDC installations in cohabitation with the existing −48 V and AC distribution.
History
Edition Recommendation Approval Study Group Unique ID*
1.0 ITU-T L.1203 2016-02-02 5 11.1002/1000/12659
Keywords
Colour, direct current (DC), identification, installation, marking, power cable.
* To access the Recommendation, type the URL http://handle.itu.int/ in the address field of your web
browser, followed by the Recommendation's unique ID. For example, http://handle.itu.int/11.1002/1000/11
830-en.
Rec. ITU-T L.1203 (02/2016) i
FOREWORD
The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) is the United Nations specialized agency in the field of
telecommunications, information and communication technologies (ICTs). The ITU Telecommunication
Standardization Sector (ITU-T) is a permanent organ of ITU. ITU-T is responsible for studying technical,
operating and tariff questions and issuing Recommendations on them with a view to standardizing
telecommunications on a worldwide basis.
The World Telecommunication Standardization Assembly (WTSA), which meets every four years, establishes
the topics for study by the ITU-T study groups which, in turn, produce Recommendations on these topics.
The approval of ITU-T Recommendations is covered by the procedure laid down in WTSA Resolution 1.
In some areas of information technology which fall within ITU-T's purview, the necessary standards are
prepared on a collaborative basis with ISO and IEC.
NOTE
In this Recommendation, the expression "Administration" is used for conciseness to indicate both a
telecommunication administration and a recognized operating agency.
Compliance with this Recommendation is voluntary. However, the Recommendation may contain certain
mandatory provisions (to ensure, e.g., interoperability or applicability) and compliance with the
Recommendation is achieved when all of these mandatory provisions are met. The words "shall" or some other
obligatory language such as "must" and the negative equivalents are used to express requirements. The use of
such words does not suggest that compliance with the Recommendation is required of any party.
ITU 2016
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, by any means whatsoever, without the prior
written permission of ITU.
1 Scope
The scope of this Recommendation is to define common practice for identification of cabling or parts
of the DC electric distribution inside buildings and rooms and inside telecom, ICT and facilities
equipment (power plant, cooling, building access, monitoring, etc.).
This applies to 400 VDC cabling for telecom, ICT equipment and environment equipment using
interface defined in [b-EN 300 132-3-1] or [ITU-T L.1200] and avoids confusion between the DC
colour and marking of up to 400 VDC distribution and the other power interfaces identification:
−48 VDC distribution for A interface, AC and uninterrupted AC given by inverters or UPS used in
the building.
The Recommendation defines:
– requirements for the colour and identification of separate wires used in DC distribution
systems and installations and as much as possible inside equipment between A or P interface
and end use;
– marking and identification of DC multiwire cables, connectors and any associated equipment
for DC power distribution;
– marking identification for sub-distribution boards and interconnection boxes.
For DC wires in multiwire cables, recommendations are given for harmonization with separate wire
requirements.
Recommendations are given on other distribution items (wires, cables and interconnection items)
including the functional earthing and bonding arrangement for distribution outside and inside
equipment to avoid any confusion with DC distribution identification of this Recommendation.
2 Reference
The following ITU-T Recommendations and other references contain provisions which, through
reference in this text, constitute provisions of this Recommendation. At the time of publication, the
editions indicated were valid. All Recommendations and other references are subject to revision;
users of this Recommendation are therefore encouraged to investigate the possibility of applying the
most recent edition of the Recommendations and other references listed below. A list of the currently
valid ITU-T Recommendations is regularly published. The reference to a document within this
Recommendation does not give it, as a stand-alone document, the status of a Recommendation.
[ITU-T L.1200] Recommendation ITU-T L.1200 (2012), Direct current power feeding interface
up to 400 V at the input to telecommunication and ICT equipment.
[IEC 60417] IEC 60417DB (2002), Graphical symbols for use on equipment.
[IEC 60445] IEC 60445 Ed 5.0 (2010), Basic and safety principles for man-machine
interface, marking and identification – Identification of equipment terminals,
conductor terminations and conductors.
[IEC 60617] IEC 60617DB (2012), Graphical symbols for diagrams.
[IEC 60757] IEC 60757 (1983), Code for designation of colours.
NOTE – IEC DB documents refer to database of graphical symbol. Some are joint with ISO e.g., IEC 60417
and ISO7000.
7.2 Colour and marking of up to 400 VDC conductor wires and cables for A3 or P
interface
The identification by colour of each conductor segment of the installation shall be used at each
termination and should be added preferably throughout all the length of the conductor. The colour
markers shall be the integral colour of the insulation of the conductor when possible. Colour markers
can be added by using coloured sleeves or attachable rings at short enough distance to avoid confusion
(e.g., in cable paths filled with many wires).
For bare conductors the colour identification shall be at termination and connection points.
If the separate wire insulation is using the colour defined in Table 1, no other colour markers are
required on the wire.
Single wire
The single wire of a new installation shall use identification by the colours and marking defined in
Table 1. It is highly recommended to use wire with insulation having the colour defined in Table 1
for user and maintenance simplification.
In case of extension or alteration of existing installation, marking shall be added respecting Table 1
on wires that are not yet using colours defined in Table 1. Identification markers such as sleeves or
rings following rules defined in clause 3.1 are possible.
Multiwire cables
If the wire inside a multiwire cable does not have the colour defined in Table 1 (see possible reason
in clause 3.1), marking colour shall be added respecting Table 1, e.g., by sleeves or ring at both ends.
For single and multiwire cable, the functional identification of the wire by labels or rings with
alphanumeric character shall be the same.
Table 1 – Requirements for up to 400 VDC colour and marking for separate wires
and for wire in multiwire cables
DC lines Colour marking Text marking Optional graphic Standard bases
symbol marking
Circuit or installation Integral to wire Text on cable On wire jacket or For colour and
downstream and insulation material jacket/label or label graphical
upstream interface A3 or on markers attached to symbols
or P (sleeve, ring, …) for connectors
external or internal to wire in multiwire
equipment cables or wires in
installation
alteration
One of the colour L+
[IEC 60617]
among options: and
[IEC 60417]
Positive line Red, Brown or voltage level +
Orange [IEC 60757]
e.g.,
(Notes 1 and 3) [b-RAL]
380 VDC
Negative line Blue L-
[IEC 60617]
HRMG (Notes 1 and 2) and
[IEC 60417]
voltage level -
Negative line Light blue [IEC 60757]
e.g.,
connected to PE (Notes 1 and 2) [b-RAL]
380 VDC
NOTE 1 – For multiwire cables and alteration of existing installation with separate wires (e.g., for
extension), when the insulation colours of wire is different from that of Table 1, identifiers of clause 3.1
should be used (e.g., sleeves).
NOTE 2 – The blue colour of L- of HRMG type (IT network) should be different from the turquoise or light
blue (blue + green) usually chosen for conductor connected to PE. It should be a blue of dark, marine or
night blue type. Refer to Appendix II for colour range and Appendix III for choice of RAL colour.
NOTE 3 – The colour of L+ conductor is chosen in a set of colour (red, brown or orange) – Refer to
Appendix II for colour range and Appendix III for choice of RAL colour.
Circuit or Integral to wire Text on cable On wire jacket or For colour and
installation insulation material or jacket/label or label graphical symbols
downstream and on markers (sleeve, attached to
upstream interface ring, …) for wire in connectors
A external or multiwire cables or
internal to wires in installation
equipment alteration
[IEC 60617]
Not defined L+
Positive Line + [IEC 60417]
(Note) (−48 V)
[IEC 60757]
[IEC 60617]
Not defined L-
Negative Line - [IEC 60417]
(Note) (−48 V)
[IEC 60757]
NOTE – Colours are not defined as many national and industry standards are already widely deployed. The
use of the colour of L- of HRMG type (IT network) of Table 1 should not be used to avoid confusion with
line connected to PE.
8.4 DC power plugs strips inside ICT equipment rooms and cabinets
The colour and marking should be the same as for DC power systems outputs.
A coloured round circle around each socket using the respective colours of Table 3 for the respective
voltage type could be used rather than full plastic colour.
I.1 Recommended colours for wires in [IEC 60757] and [IEC 60445]
The recommended colours of wires are given in Annex B of [IEC 60757] in Table B.1.
Table B.1 – Recommended colours and code
Black BK, Blue BU, Brown BN, Green GN, Orange OG, Red RD, Violet (purple) VT, White WH,
Yellow YE
Other colours may be used based on agreement between customer and supplier (see [IEC 60757]).
More colours and codes are in national standard such as DIN transposition of [IEC 60757]: Grey GY,
Pink PK, Gold GD, Turquoise TQ, Silver SR.
The [IEC 60445] standard permits the following colours for identifying conductors: Black BK,
Blue BU, Brown BN, Green GN, Orange OG, Red RD, Violet (purple) VT, White WH, Yellow YE,
Grey GY, Pink PK, Turquoise TQ.
The colours green and yellow on their own are only permitted where confusion with the colouring of
the green/yellow protective conductor is unlikely. Combinations of the above colours are permitted,
but green and yellow should not be used in any of these combinations other than as green/yellow for
the protective conductor.
If a circuit includes a neutral or midpoint conductor, then it should be identified by a blue colour
(preferably light blue). Light blue is the colour used to identify intrinsically safe conductors, and must
not be used for any other type of conductor.
Table I.1
Wire colour Function Wire colour Function
Black Ground power Green Power on
Orange +3.3 V power Purple +5 V standby
Red +5 V power Grey Power good
Yellow +12 V power Brown +3.3 V sense
Blue −12 V power White −5 V
The choice of colour outlined in Table 1 was carefully documented taking into account the
information of this appendix and colour codes for quality manufacturing.
Some optimization reasons are provided:
– Only single colour of list of [IEC 60757] and not bicolour solution to ensure lower cost due
to mass market.
– Black and red are massively used for L- and L+ in DC while black is standardized at
international level for AC live conductor and red is used also in some countries
(see Annex 1). Dark blue is defined as negative conductor inside mechanical tool machine
using DC. Black or blue and red are used in some countries for telecom site cabling from
source to interface A. As a consequence it was decided to differentiate higher DC voltage of
interface A3 from interface A and other uses which means using dark blue for up to 400 VDC
L- line.
– Orange and violet are almost diametraly opposed on the colour wheel (Figure II.1). Both are
made in combination with the red colour that can give a kind of high voltage warning for live
or hot conductor L+ and L-, while the neutral or cold conductor is ice light blue (commonly
close to cyan, a mix of blue and green). While being more subjective, red or orange are very
live colour as they are pure red or mix of red and yellow, adapted to the need of a positive
colour for positive line, dark blue or blue-violet combining red and dark blue are dark colour
adapted for a negative colour for negative line.
– Considering multiwire cable: AC cables are usually compliant with DC voltage and have
standard colours of [IEC 60757] and so industry has considered its reuse as they are widely
produced. In these cables brown and blue could be used for DC according to [b-BS 7671].
Brown can be considered close to orange or red as seen in Figure II.1.
Figure II.1 – Colour wheel RYB (Red Yellow Blue), used in artistic painting before CMYK
(cyan, magenta, yellow, and key-black) set of 3 substractive primary colours +
black used in modern printing in substractive colours
For industry quality reason, RAL colour range code is proposed. The RAL 840 (RAL classic) colour
ranges are listed in Table III.1. A main criterion for colours in the RAL classic collection is to be of
"paramount interest". Therefore most of the colours in it are used on warning and traffic signs or are
dedicated to government agencies and public services such as for security signals and safety marking.
Some wire manufacturers such as [b-Nexans] or Topflex are engaged in carefully respecting the
insulation colour defined with RAL colours reference and ensuring stability with time and exposure
to light or chemical agents.
RAL 1xxx Yellow RAL 1000 Green Beige RAL 1037 Sun Yellow 40
RAL 2xxx Orange RAL 2000 Yellow Orange RAL 2013 Pearl Orange 14
RAL 3xxx Red RAL 3000 Fire Red RAL 3033 Pearl Pink 34
RAL 4xxx Violet RAL 4001 Red Purple RAL 4012 Pearl Black Berry 12
RAL 5xxx Blue RAL 5000 Violet Blue RAL 5026 Pearl Night Blue 25
RAL 6xxx Green RAL 6000 Patina Green RAL 6038 Luminous Green 36
RAL 7xxx Grey RAL 7000 Squirrel Grey RAL 7048 Pearl Mouse Grey 38
RAL 8xxx Brown RAL 8000 Green Brown RAL 8029 Pearl Copper 20
RAL 9xxx White/Black RAL 9001 Cream RAL 9023 Pearl Dark Grey 14
RAL colours could be seen in [b-RAL] with RGB decimal and hexadecimal coding.
For better application of this standard each insulation colour is associated with a set of referenced
colours. The main ones are indicated first, other RAL are indicated as possible. Correspondence with
other colour specification can be done (see end of this appendix).
L+
Red
RAL 3031 (red),
Other RAL: 3000 (flame red), 3001 (signal red), 3002 (carmine red), 3020 (traffic red),
3024 (luminous red), 3028 (pure red)
Orange
RAL 2010 (signal Orange)
Other RAL: 2001 (red orange), 2002 (vermillion), 2003, 2004 (pure orange), 2005 (luminous orange),
2008 (bright red orange), 2009 (traffic Orange), 2011 (deep orange)
[b-Nexans] http://www.nexans.fr/France/2009/Leaflet.pdf
[b-Pantone] http://www.pantone-colours.com/
[b-RAL] http://www.ralcolours.com/
[b-YD/T 2378] CCSA YD/T 2378 (2011), 240V Direct Current Power supply system
for Telecommunications.
Series E Overall network operation, telephone service, service operation and human factors
Series F Non-telephone telecommunication services
Series G Transmission systems and media, digital systems and networks
Series L Environment and ICTs, climate change, e-waste, energy efficiency; construction,
installation and protection of cables and other elements of outside plant
Series M Telecommunication management, including TMN and network maintenance
Series N Maintenance: international sound programme and television transmission circuits
Series O Specifications of measuring equipment
Printed in Switzerland
Geneva, 2016