Three cable fixing methods coexist on every wind turbine installation — cable ties, cable ladders, and cable cleats. They all appear to "fix cables," but they operate on entirely different load ratings, serve different engineering functions, and are not interchangeable for main power circuits. Getting the choice wrong is invisible in normal service and catastrophic during a fault.
§ 01 Cable ties: lowest cost, no fault withstand
Nylon cable ties are the cheapest and fastest fixing method and are entirely appropriate for bundling and organising signal, control, and communications wiring. They have one fundamental limitation for HV power circuits: they have no short-circuit withstand rating and have never been tested under impulse loading.
During a fault on a main power circuit, electromagnetic force between conductors can exceed thousands of newtons per metre. Any nylon tie — regardless of size or number — fails immediately under cable-whip conditions. Using ties as the primary restraint on a power circuit is one of the most common and most consequential cable fixing errors in wind energy installations.
§ 02 Cable ladders and trays: routing, not restraint
Cable ladders and trays organise the cable routing path and support cable self-weight. They answer the question "where does the cable go," not "will the cable stay there during a fault."
Cables lying in an open ladder tray have essentially no lateral restraint. During a fault, they will be thrown from the tray just as effectively as if they were unsupported. Ladders and cleats are complementary — the ladder provides the route, the cleat provides the restraint — not alternatives.
§ 03 Cable cleats: the only fault-rated fixing
A cable cleat encircles the cable(s) completely, bolts to a supporting structure, and has been type-tested under a defined peak fault current without fracture or release. Its short-circuit withstand current (kA) — declared per IEC 61914 — is the single figure that makes it categorically different from every other fixing method.
§ 04 Side-by-side comparison
| Attribute | Cable Tie | Cable Ladder | Cable Cleat |
|---|---|---|---|
| Short-circuit restraint | None (fails) | None (open tray) | Yes — kA rated |
| IEC 61914 certification | Not applicable | Not applicable | Required |
| Cable weight support | Partial | Yes | Partial (combined) |
| Applicable circuits | Signal / control (bundling) | Any (routing) | Main power / high fault current |
| Cost | Lowest | Medium | Medium–high |
| Installation effort | Lowest | Medium | Medium |
§ 05 The decision rule
One question determines the correct fixing method: if this circuit faults, does the resulting electromagnetic force need to be restrained?
- Main power cables, large-section three-phase circuits → cable cleats, kA rating must cover system peak current;
- Control and signal cables → ties for bundling; still needs attachment to a support structure, not free suspension;
- Any circuit needing managed routing → ladder or tray plus cleats for restraint; the two work together.
For how to size the cleat once the method is confirmed, see Cable Cleat Selection Parameters.