- above.
Lower voltages, such as 66 kV and 33 kV, are
usually considered subtransmission voltages, but are
occasionally used on long
lines with
light loads...
-
service drop
carries this
lower voltage to the customer's premises.
Subtransmission lines carry higher voltage power from
regional substations to local...
- may be
connected directly to the
primary distribution level or the
subtransmission level. The
transition from
transmission to
distribution happens in...
-
distribution in
urban and
rural areas. High
voltage (HV;
subtransmission less than 100 kV;
subtransmission or
transmission at
voltages such as 115 kV and 138 kV)...
- 2011 earthquakes,
especially in the north-east,
where the 66,000-volt
subtransmission cables supplying the area were
damaged beyond repair. This necessitated...
-
Trust for
Northpower to
remain in
consumer ownership. The
Northpower subtransmission and
distribution network is
connected to the
national grid via five...
-
consumers connected to its network. EA
Networks owns and
operates the
subtransmission and
distribution network in the
Ashburton District (also
known as Mid-Canterbury)...
-
transmission line from Karapiro. As of 2024,
Waipa Networks doesn't have a
subtransmission network; the two GXPs
directly feed the 11,000-volt
distribution network...
- (Ruakura Road), Te Kowhai, and Huntly. WEL
Networks uses 33,000
volts for
subtransmission and 11,000
volts for distribution.: 30–31 As is
standard in New Zealand...
-
Subtransmission is
typically at 33 kV, 50 kV, 66 kV or 110 kV,
although parts of
Auckland isthmus use 22 kV
subtransmission. Distribution...