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https://www.linkedin.

com/pulse/electrical-design-process-phase-deliverables-atiq-ur-rehman-o7z6f/

Electrical Design Process-Phase Deliverables:

Atiq ur Rehman
Lead Electrical Design Engineer | Power System Studies | Project Manager | Commissioning &
Startup Engineer | Technical Consultant | Project Engineer | Senior Power Systems Engineer |
ETAP, PSCAD, PSSE

April 22, 2024

1. Project Scope Definition: Define the project requirements, objectives, and constraints.
Understand the purpose of the electrical system, the expected load demand,
environmental factors, regulatory requirements, and budget constraints.

2. Preliminary Design: Develop a conceptual design that outlines the general layout and
functionality of the electrical system. Identify major components, such as transformers,
switchgear, distribution panels, and lighting fixtures. Consider factors like voltage levels,
power distribution, and system redundancy.

3. Load Calculation: Determine the electrical load requirements of the system by


calculating the expected power demand from various loads, including lighting, HVAC
systems, motors, appliances, and other electrical equipment. Consider factors like
diversity, demand factors, and future expansion.

4. Single Line Diagram (SLD) Development: Create a single line diagram that illustrates
the electrical system's topology and connectivity. This diagram provides an overview of
the system's components, including power sources, distribution equipment, loads, and
protective devices.

5. Equipment Selection: Select appropriate electrical equipment, such as transformers,


circuit breakers, fuses, switches, cables, and conductors, based on the project
requirements, load calculations, safety standards, and industry best practices.

6. Cable Sizing and Routing: Determine the size, type, and routing of electrical cables
and conductors based on the anticipated loads, voltage drop constraints, ambient
conditions, and safety requirements. Ensure proper separation of power and control
cables to minimize interference.

7. Protection and Coordination Studies: Perform protective device coordination studies


to ensure that protective devices, such as circuit breakers and fuses, operate selectively
and efficiently in response to fault conditions. Coordinate protective settings to
minimize downtime and equipment damage.

8. Grounding and Bonding Design: Design the grounding and bonding system to
provide electrical safety and protect against electrical hazards, including electrical shock,
lightning strikes, and electromagnetic interference (EMI).

9. Lighting Design: Develop a lighting layout that meets the project's aesthetic,
functional, and energy efficiency requirements. Specify lighting fixtures, lamps, controls,
and daylighting strategies to optimize illumination levels and minimize energy
consumption.

10. Power Distribution System Design: Design the power distribution system to deliver
electrical power from the source to the loads efficiently and reliably. Specify the
arrangement of distribution panels, busbars, feeder circuits, and protective devices to
ensure balanced loads and fault tolerance.

11. Control System Design: Develop the control system architecture, including control
panels, instrumentation, sensors, actuators, and communication networks. Design
control logic, interfaces, and feedback loops to monitor and regulate system parameters
effectively.

12. Documentation and Specifications: Prepare detailed drawings, specifications, and


documentation packages that convey the design intent, technical requirements, and
installation guidelines to contractors, installers, and stakeholders. Include material lists,
wiring diagrams, schedules, and equipment specifications.

13. Review and Approval: Review the electrical design for accuracy, compliance with
codes and standards, and alignment with project requirements. Seek approval from
regulatory authorities, clients, and other stakeholders before proceeding with
implementation.

14. Construction and Installation: Oversee the construction and installation of the
electrical system according to the approved design documents. Coordinate with
contractors, vendors, and suppliers to ensure that work is performed safely, efficiently,
and in accordance with specifications.

15. Testing and Commissioning: Test and commission the electrical system to verify its
performance, functionality, and safety.

16. Operation and Maintenance: Provide operation and maintenance manuals, training,
and support to facility operators and maintenance personnel.
Electrical Design Process - Phase Deliverables

https://www.hm-ec.com/blog-posts/instrumentation-and-electrical-feed-deliverables-list

The front-end engineering design phase—often referred to as FEED or basic


engineering—plays an important role in preparing capital projects for successful
execution. In addition to producing an accurate cost estimate, FEED is utilized to
develop a strong scope definition, budget, and timeline while also identifying project
risks. This process can be utilized for projects of all types and sizes to reduce project
risk, ultimately improving risk identification, increasing budget and schedule certainty,
reducing health, safety, and environmental (HSE) risks, and reducing time to achieve
plant or process start-up, commissioning, and turnover.
FEED is the third phase of the stage gate process (FEL 3/FEP 3) that follows a
feasibility study or conceptual design. It can be done as a standalone process to enable
project owners to competitively bid out detail engineering and design and construction,
or it can be integrated into a formal stage gate process.
A properly executed FEED will:

 Produce engineering packages that establish a solid basis for the next phase.
 Evaluate any potential design options that may improve return on investment (ROI).
 Conduct hazardous operations reviews to improve safety outcomes.
 Support internal funding approval processes.
 Provide a robust framework or baseline that can be referenced and checked against as
the project progresses through the engineering and construction phases of the project.

The FEED process gives rise to many important deliverables, typically separated by
discipline, that retain value through project execution. Below, we provide information on
common instrumentation and electrical FEED deliverables.

Instrumentation and Electrical FEED


Deliverables List
Every capital project is unique; consequently, the depth and degree of detail for
instrumentation and electrical FEED deliverables depends on project scope, owner
requirements, provided items, project drivers, project characteristics, and risk. However,
several common deliverables are produced during this process. A comprehensive list of
common instrumentation and electrical FEED deliverables is detailed below.

 Electrical Single-Line Diagrams (SLDs): An electrical single-line diagram, also


referred to as a one-line diagram, is a high-level schematic diagram that provides a
visual representation of how electrical components connect and how the power flows
through an electric power system in a condensed manner (i.e., a single line). A single-
line diagram typically includes symbols to indicate information such as AC generators,
power transformers, current transformers, circuit breakers, switches, motors, and fuses,
among others.
 Instrumentation Index: An instrument index, or instrument schedule, is a document that
provides a list of instrument devices used in a plant. This should include information
such as tag number, type of instrument, location, service description, line or equipment
number, control system, I/O type, manufacturer, model number, and reference
documents.
 Major Electrical Equipment List: Major electrical equipment typically refers to large,
complex equipment or longer lead items (e.g. a large transformer or motor control
center). Major electrical equipment details during FEED are provided as a listing of such
equipment. This list may include tag numbers, equipment manufacturers, and other
information of that nature.
 Electrical Block Diagrams: An electrical block diagram is a type of electrical drawing
that helps visualize principal components of a complex electrical system in the form of
blocks and interconnected lines describing their relationships. This highly simplistic
diagram explains the system as a whole, demonstrating the general operation and
arrangement of major components. This diagram may also be used for scope splits
where many third-party entities are involved or situations in which the owner may be
involved and the contractor is not directly providing services and/or materials.
 Area Classification Plans: An area classification plan is a plant or facility drawing that
specifies if there is a process that contains materials that are flammable or explosive in
nature. This document defines the border of the flammable area so that if electrical or
instrumentation equipment is installed in that area, they are rated to operate in those
areas without causing a massive explosion or safety hazard. These zones are typically
depicted on the drawing by bubbles of various hatch markings.
 Cause and Effects (Hazard and Operability Analysis [HAZOP]): HAZOP is a
structured systematic process to identify hazards in a given work process. The work
process is broken down into steps, and each step is systematically analyzed to identify
any potential hazards. HAZOPs typically come from the process engineering team and
are used by the electrical and instrumentation team to produce cause and effect
diagrams. This diagram documents the scenarios analyzed in a HAZOP (e.g. for a
shutdown case; for each process condition that causes a shutdown, a matrix will be
used to depict which instruments need to be actuated or be at a certain state during a
shutdown scenario).
 Motor List/Load List: A motor list, also known as a load list, is used to define process
loads (major equipment in the process line powered with electricity). This listing of loads
helps quantify the overall power demand on the electrical system so that equipment can
be adequately sized/rated.

The detailed design and engineering phase, also known as the detail engineering and
design phase, is the last phase of engineering. You may also hear it referred to as the
first phase of project execution.
After all parameters of scope, including timeline, budget, and site, have been clearly
defined and agreed upon by project stakeholders, detailed design can begin. In this
phase, all departments and disciplines from the design team/contractor work together to
determine and produce the optimal design for project success. The team should work to
develop a design that strikes a balance between budget and efficiency while placing
a strong focus on safety. After the design has been fleshed out, the contractor’s
engineering team provides a set of highly disciplined drawings that will be used for
construction.
In this article, we provide a comprehensive detailed design and engineering deliverable
list, including deliverables included in a typical Issued for Construction (IFC) package in
addition to common optional deliverables.
Detailed Design and Engineering
Deliverable List
Every capital project is unique—consequently, detailed design and engineering
deliverables may vary. Deliverables produced during this phase are largely dependent
on project scope and may also vary depending on other aspects, such as client/project
owner requirements, provided items, project characteristics, driving factors, and risk.
However, for typical multidisciplinary projects within industries such as energy,
chemicals, and terminal and logistics, project deliverables are fairly standardized.
Below is a comprehensive detailed design and engineering deliverable list.

Standard Deliverables/IFC
OVERALL

 Scope of Work
 Project Schedule (Level 3)
 Constructability Review
 Total Installed Cost (TIC) Estimate

PROCESS

 Process Flow Diagrams (PFDs)


 Process Drawing List
 Pressure Safety Valve (PSV) Study

MECHANICAL/PIPING

 Piping and Instrumentation Diagram (P&ID)


 Plot Plan
 Equipment Arrangement Plan
 3D Model
 Line List
 Tie-In List
 Piping Layout/Plans and Sections
 Piping Stress Analysis
 Equipment Trim Drawing
 Specialty Item List
 Related Piping Standards
 Equipment Reference Drawings
 Fabrication Isometrics with Bill of Materials (BOM)
 Equipment Process Data Sheets
 Equipment List
 Certified Equipment Drawings
 Equipment Calculations
 Vendor Data Sheets
 Equipment Installation Operating Manual (IOM)

CIVIL/STRUCTURAL

 Foundation Location Plan


 Foundation Drawings
 Structural Design and Analysis/Sketches
 Building Plans and Elevation
 Concrete Details
 Steel Details
 Calculation Package

INSTRUMENTATION & ELECTRICAL

 Single-Line Diagrams (SLDs)


 Instrument Index
 Electrical Classification Plan
 Controls Logic
 Specification Sheets

*Note: Standard detailed design and engineering deliverables may vary depending on
client requirements, provided items, project drivers, characteristics, and risk.

Optional Deliverables
 Hazard Analysis
 Process-Specific Deliverables
 IFC Design Basis and Assumptions
 Final Equipment Insulation
 Underground Plan
 Firewater Plan
 Pipe Support Details
 New Soil Study
 Contaminant Calculations
 Grading Plan
 Safety Control System
 Motor List
 Demolition Drawings
 Identify Substation, Transformer, or, Feeder Needs
 Electrical Heat Tracing (EHT)
 Lighting
 Gas/Fire Detectors
 Emergency Shutdowns (ESDs)
 Programming

*Note: Optional detailed design and engineering deliverables are contingent upon
project scope, and client requirements and early deliverables depend on client priorities
and specific project needs.
Preparing for Successful Detailed Design
and Engineering
Project success for any capital project relies heavily on proper planning and scope
development. Poor or late planning and scope definition can lead to significant changes
to scope and increased change orders, which can result in significant cost and schedule
overruns.
Before entering the detailed design and engineering phase, project owners should
ensure they have all components necessary for contractors to complete the design.
Design contractors will likely require project owners to provide the following information
and documentation:

 Basis of Engineering and Design Data (BEDD)


 Front-End Planning/Loading (FEP/FEL) 3 Package (if available)
 Existing Drawings and Studies
 Safety Requirements
 Client Specifications and Standards
 Permitting Requirements

H+M Industrial: Designing for Capital


Project Success
For more than 30 years, H+M Industrial EPC has provided leading capital project
execution services to the energy, chemical, and terminal and logistics industries. Being
client-focused, we provide cost-effective, fit-for-purpose engineering solutions to meet
your needs. We will work closely with you to bring your vision to life while prioritizing the
success of your projects with every decision we make.

https://paktechpoint.com/electrical-project-deliverables-electrical-deliverables-list/#google_vignette

Electrical Project Deliverables | Electrical


Deliverables List
Following are the list of Electrical Project Deliverables list and Document
numbers shall be assigned in numerical order following sequence.

1.
1. Drawing Index – Create using Standard Deliverable
TEMPLATE ELEC 0040 from the document storage system.
This will be a living document for the duration of the detailed
design phase.
2. General Notes – Create using Standard Deliverable
TEMPLATE ELEC 0007 SH.01 from the document storage
system.
3. Medium Voltage Single Line Diagram – Create using
Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0040 from the
document storage system. Voltage level of the single line shall
appear in both the placeholder and drawing title. Drawing
content requires the finalized Medium Voltage Single Line
obtained from electrical engineering and vendor drawings for the
medium voltage equipment. Reference 3EL61001 for single line
drawing content.
4. Low Voltage Single Line Diagram – Create using Standard
Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0040 from the document storage
system. Voltage level of the single line shall appear in both the
placeholder and drawing title. Drawing content requires the
finalized Low Voltage Single Line obtained from electrical
engineering and vendor drawings for the Low voltage
equipment. Reference 3EL61001 for single line drawing content.
5. Medium Voltage (>1000 volts) Control Schematic – Create
using Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0051 from the
document storage system. Drawing content requires the P&ID,
I/O list, load list, medium voltage single lines, and vendor
drawings for the medium voltage equipment.
6. Low Voltage AC Equipment (>240 volts and <1001 volts)
Control Schematics – Create using Standard Deliverable STD-
DELIV ELEC 0051 from the document storage system. Drawing
content requires the P&ID, I/O list, load list, low voltage single
lines, and vendor drawings for the low voltage equipment.
7. Low Voltage AC Equipment (<241 volts) Control
Schematics – Create using Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV
ELEC 0051 from the document storage system. Drawing
content requires the P&ID, I/O list, load list, low voltage single
lines, and vendor drawings for the low voltage equipment.
8. Low Voltage 24 VDC Control Schematics – Create using
Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0051 from the
document storage system. Drawing content requires the P&ID,
I/O list, load list, and vendor drawings for the 24 VDC
equipment.
9. Low Voltage Panel board Schedules – Create using Standard
Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0005 SH.01 from the document
storage system. Drawing content requires the I/O list, load list,
vendor drawings for the electrical equipment, and information
generated during the design effort.
10. Underground Grounding Grid document – Create using
Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0013 SH.01 from the
document storage system. Drawing content requires the
equipment arrangement drawing, general arrangement drawing,
piperack layout drawings, vendor equipment drawings, and
information generated during the design effort. The
Underground Grounding Grid document(s) shall be broken down
by area with sheet 1 showing the entire plant or area and
indicating which drawing sheet details each area.
11. Underground Conduit document – Create using Standard
Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0013 SH.01 from the document
storage system. Drawing content requires the equipment
arrangement drawing, general arrangement drawing, piperack
layout drawings, vendor equipment drawings, and information
generated during the design effort. The Underground Conduit
document(s) shall be broken down by area with sheet 1 showing
the entire plant or area and indicating which drawing sheet
details each area.
12. Cable tray Layout documents – Create using Standard
Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0033 from the document storage
system. Drawing content requires the appropriate standards and
standard drawings obtained from the document storage system
and information from the General Arrangement drawings,
Piperack drawings, and Structural Support drawings. The Cable
tray Layout document(s) shall be broken down by area with
sheet 1 showing the entire plant or area and indicating which
drawing sheet details each area. Each cable tray, wire way,
conduit, or other raceway shown on the design drawings shall
have a unique identifying number such as CT1 for cable tray 1.
The raceway identifiers shall appear on all documents where
they are referenced.
13. Lighting and Utility Plan document(s) – Create using
Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0011 from the
document storage system. Drawing content requires the
appropriate standards and standard drawings obtained from the
document storage system and information from the General
Arrangement drawings and Equipment Layout drawings. The
Lighting and Utility Plan documents shall be broken down by
area with sheet 1 showing the entire plant or area and indicating
which drawing sheet details each area. If a higher degree of
detail is required to meet project requirements the Electrical
Designer may choose to use Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV
ELEC 0037 “Lighting Plan (Plant, Process Area, Description)”
and Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0038 “Utility Plan”.
Separate document numbers are required for each Standard
Deliverable type used with sheet 1 of each type showing the
entire plant or area and indicating which drawing sheet details
each area.
14. Heat Trace Schedule document – Create using Standard
Deliverable TEMPLATE ELEC 0043 from the document storage
system. Drawing content requires the appropriate standards and
standard drawings obtained from the document storage system
and information from the Project P&IDs, Piping Isometrics,
Vendor equipment documents and Equipment Layout
drawings. Electrical design shall be responsible for specification
and creation of freeze protection heat trace documentation.
Electrical design shall not be responsible for the specification or
control methodology of process maintenance heat trace. Heat
trace used to maintain temperatures for process lines, vessels,
and equipment shall be specified by the Process Engineering
group or designee and Process Systems or designee shall be
responsible for proposing the maintenance heat trace control
methodology. Electrical design shall be responsible for creating
the electrical schematics and documentation to power and
control the maintenance heat trace. When the design indicates
that Heat Trace terminal enclosures are required, the Electrical
Designer shall incorporate the Heat Trace Junction Box
Fabrication drawings as a separate sheet number under the
Heat Trace Schedule document number.
15. Terminal Box Tabulation documents – Create using
Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0014 SH.01 from the
document storage system. Drawing content requires the I/O list,
load list, vendor equipment data, Project P&IDs, General
Arrangement drawings and Equipment Layout drawings.
16. Control/Junction Box Fabrication documents – Create
using Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0044 from the
document storage system. Drawing content requires the I/O list,
load list, vendor equipment data, Project P&IDs and information
generated during the design effort. Control/Junction Box
Fabrication drawings include, but are not limited to AC
Control/Junction Boxes, DC Control/Junction Boxes, Smoke
Alarm panels, System Alarm panels, System Monitoring panels,
Interposing Relay panels, ICP Shutdown Panels, Medium
Voltage Remote Control Panel, etc..
17. AC Interconnect Wiring Diagram document(s) – Create
using Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0019 SH.01 from
the document storage system. Drawing content requires the I/O
list, load list, vendor supplied Electrical Equipment data, Project
P&IDs and information generated during the design effort. The
AC Interconnect Wiring Diagram document shall be broken
down by area with each area given a unique document number.
Multiple AC Interconnect Wiring Diagram drawings for a given
area shall be given a single document number with individual
sheets detailing each Interconnection drawing.
18. DC Interconnect Wiring Diagram documents – Create
using Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0019 SH.01 from
the document storage system. Drawing content requires the I/O
list, load list, vendor supplied Electrical Equipment data, Project
P&IDs and information generated during the design effort. The
DC Interconnect Wiring Diagram document(s) shall be broken
down by area with each area given a unique document number.
Multiple DC Interconnect Wiring Diagram drawings for a given
area shall be given a single document number with individual
sheets detailing each Interconnection drawing.
19. AC Power and Control Cable Schedule documents
– Create using Standard Deliverable TEMPLATE ELEC 0041
from the document storage system. Drawing content requires
the I/O list, load list, single line, vendor equipment data, Project
P&IDs and information generated during the design effort. The
AC Power and Control Cable Schedule documents shall be
broken down by area with sheet 1 showing the entire plant or
area and indicating which sheet details each area. Multiple AC
Power and Control Cable Schedule documents for a given area
shall be given a single document number with individual sheets
detailing each AC Power and Control Cable Schedule
document.
20. DC Power and Control Cable Schedule documents
– Create using Standard Deliverable TEMPLATE ELEC 0042
from the document storage system. Drawing content requires
the I/O list, load list, single line, vendor equipment data, Project
P&IDs and information generated during the design effort. The
DC Power and Control Cable Schedule documents shall be
broken down by area with sheet 1 showing the entire plant or
area and indicating which sheet details each area. Multiple AC
Power and Control Cable Schedule documents for a given area
shall be given a single document number with individual sheets
detailing each DC Power and Control Cable Schedule
document.
21. Building Plan Detail documents – Create using Standard
Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0009 SH.01 from the document
storage system. Drawing content requires the vendor supplied
data, project requirements, and Plant Design information
obtained from the document storage system and applicable
disciplines, and information created during the design. The
Building Plan Detail documents shall be broken down by
building type or purpose. Each building type will have a unique
document number with individual sheets detailing building
layouts details. Electrical Buildings, Analyzer Buildings,
Control Buildings, Maintenance Buildings, Compressor
Buildings, Pump Houses, Waste Water Treatment
Buildings, Garages, and Miscellaneous Buildings
 Sheet 1 – General Arrangement (GA) including outdoor
equipment such as transformers and capacitor banks. The
GA shall show equipment locations and dimensions, to scale,
to show the locations of equipment installed inside the
building.
 Sheet 2 – Power and lighting wiring details.
 Sheet 3 – Cable Tray/Raceway Layout details.
 Sheet 4 – Building penetrations including wall penetrations
for cable tray, arc blast duct, bulkheads, etc and floor
penetrations for underground conduit or duct.
 Sheet 5 – Equipment section views and details.
 Sheet 6 – Fire Alarm/Atmospheric Monitoring System plans
and details.
 Sheet 7 on – Miscellaneous Details, Bills of Material, Cable or
Bus Duct Details, etc. When more than one sheet is required
to show all details or multiple levels the sheet number shall
be suffixed with A, B, C, etc.
22. Plant Plan and Details documents – Create using Standard
Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0009 SH.01 from the document
storage system. Drawing content requires the vendor supplied
data, project requirements, and Plant Design information
obtained from the document storage system and applicable
disciplines, and information created during the design effort.
Plant Plan and Details drawings include, but are not limited to
location drawings for ground pigtails, field mounted e-stops, lube
oil heaters, vacuum blowers, pump motors, field mounted
disconnect switches, motor heater terminal boxes, motor
terminal boxes, motor CT terminal boxes, motor instrument
terminal boxes, vendor supplied junction boxes, APCI supplied
junction and terminal boxes, field mounted analyzer and I/O
panels, remote PES panels, and control panels.
23. Plant Bill of Material documents – Create using Standard
Deliverable TEMPLATE ELEC 0044 from the document storage
system. Drawing content requires the information created during
the design effort.
24. Electrical Equipment Connection documents – Create
using Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0044 from the
document storage system. This document is used when cable to
equipment connections are not in separate enclosures or when
cables can come in contact with energized components; for
example, dry type medium voltage motor starting reactors.
Document shall detail required cable separation clearances,
cable mounting and support details and cable connection
details. Drawing content requires information from the electrical
engineer and the vendor installation drawings and
manuals. Note: Special attention to drawing detail is required
when the electrical designer designs for a “one-off” application.
The electrical designer shall meet with the appropriate discipline
to discuss any special requirements for the equipment and to
review the vendor’s information.
25. Hazardous Area Classification Drawing documents
– Create using Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0006
SH.01 from the document storage system. Drawing content
requires the Plot Plan and information from the Project
Manager, Project Development Engineer, and Environmental,
Health and Safety Department.
26. Fiber Optic Cable Details documents – Create using
Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0009 SH.01 from the
document storage system. Drawing content requires information
from the Electrical Engineer, Process Controls Engineer,
Security, and Information Technology (IT) to determine the type
of communication equipment, their locations, cable type, and
cable routing that will be utilized on the project.
27. Medium Voltage Motor/Transformer Phasing documents
– Create using Standard Deliverable STD-DELIV ELEC 0040
from the document storage system. Drawing content requires
Electrical Standard 28-4EL64476A “Motor Phasing Form”, the
information from the Single Line Diagram, Motor Vendor Data,
and Electrical Engineering.
28. High Voltage Cable Design Form documents – Create
using Standard Deliverable TEMPLATE P710 0001 from the
document storage system. To make high voltage cable design
form Document requires information from the Single
Line Diagram, AC Power and Control Cable Schedule and
Electrical Engineer.
29. High Voltage Cable Order Form document(s) – Create
using Standard Deliverable TEMPLATE P710 0002 from the
document storage system. To make high voltage cable order
form Document requires information from the High Voltage
Cable Design Form, Single Line Diagram, AC Power and
Control Cable Schedule and Electrical.
30. High Voltage Cable, Project Transmittal Requisition
documents – Create using Standard Deliverable TEMPLATE
P710 0003 from the document storage system. Document
content requires information from the High Voltage Cable Order.
31. Terminal Lug Order Form documents – Create using
Standard Deliverable TEMPLATE P750 0001 from the
document storage system. Document content requires
information from the High Voltage Cable Design Form.
32. Termination Kit Order Form document(s) – Create using
Standard Deliverable TEMPLATE P750 0002 from the
document storage system. Document content requires
information from the High Voltage Cable Design Form.
33. Project Transmittal Requisition – Terminal Lugs and
Termination Kits document(s) – Create using Standard
Deliverable TEMPLATE P750 0003 from the document storage
system. Document content requires information from the
Terminal Lug Order Form and the Termination Kit Order Form.

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