Busbars are used when equipment needs a compact, organized, high-current distribution path. This guide explains how busbars work, common types, key design factors, and how to choose the right busbar for your application. They are common inside enclosed equipment, but they also appear in outdoor substations, switchyards, battery racks, renewable energy systems, and large industrial facilities. Figures 1 and 2 show. A busbar is a solid strip or block made of conductive metal, typically copper and often tin-plated to resist corrosion, designed to distribute electrical power. It acts as a central point where multiple circuits can connect, enabling the organised and efficient flow of current within a DC system. With modern systems demanding higher efficiency. Definition: An electrical bus bar is defined as a conductor or a group of conductor used for collecting electric power from the incoming feeders and distributes them to the outgoing feeders.
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