efter 5 år får Ingeniørdebat.dk nu en ansigtsløftning
On the Danish side, the static inverter plant used as well by Konti–Skan 1 and 2 is close to Vester Hassing near Aalborg. From Vester Hassing a 34 kilometres (21 mi) long overhead line with two conductors runs to the cable terminal at the Danish coast near Staesnaes. This line was originally used by the high voltage pole of Konti–Skan 1 and from Vester Hassing until a point a few kilometres south of the cable terminal by the electrode line, which turned there eastwards to the ground electrode at Soera. At implementation of Konti–Skan 2 the whole overhead electrode line was replaced by two 27 kilometres (17 mi) long underground cables and the second conductor of the overhead line got the high-voltage pole of Konti–Skan 2. The 23 kilometres (14 mi) long submarine cable to the Danish island of Laeso starts at Stensnaes and consists of 3 parallel cables. Each of these cables has two copper conductors with a copper cross section of 310 square millimeters. One of these cables was used by Kontiskan 1 and one is used by Kontiskan 2. From the third cable, one conductor was used by Kontiskan 1 and the other is used by Kontiskan 2. Konti–Skan crosses Laeso-Island on a 17 kilometres (11 mi) long overhead line with two conductors. Before the implementation of Konti–Skan 2 both conductors were switched parallel, today one conductor is used for the high voltage pole of Konti–Skan 1, while the other is used by that of Konti–Skan 2. Between Laeso and Sweden each high voltage pole of Konti–Skan uses a monopolar copper cable with a cross section of 1200 square millimetres.From the Swedish coast a 38 kilometres (24 mi) long overhead power line runs to the converter station of Konti–Skan 1 near Stenkullen. On the first 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) of this line the pylons carry the high-voltage conductors of Kontiskan 1 and 2. East of Brännemysten they carry also the conductor of the electrode line like a ground conductor on the pinnacle, but of course insulated to the structure of the pylons. It comes from the common grounding electrode of Kontiskan 1 and 2 near Risø in the Baltic Sea and runs after a submarine/underground cable section ending at a cable terminal near Brattas northwards as pole line to the high voltage pole line of Konti–Skan at Brännemysten. The Swedish static inverters of Kontiskan are situated at different places: that of Kontiskan 1 at Stenkullen, east of Göteborg and that of Kontiskan 2 near Lindome south of Göteborg and south of the route of Kontiskan 1. The last 30 kilometres (19 mi) of Konti–Skan 1 are installed on guyed aluminum framework pylons with an unusually low weight of only 800 kilograms. These pylons carry 2 conductors, the high-voltage pole and the electrode line of Konti–Skan 1 on insulators of equal length.
Tak.Jeg har identificeret "Lyngsa Cable Terminal" på Google Earth.Den ligger på stranden ved Lyngså, 200 m inden for kysten. Luftledningen ender ganske rigtigt der, og der er ingen synlige strukturer længere ude, så jeg må bøje mig.Det ændrer ikke ved, at jeg har læst om miljøproblemet med katoder placeret i havet i et fagligt tidsskrift, da jeg i sin tid omgikkes elproducenter. Men det omhandler åbenbart ikke Konti-Skan (måske fordi konstruktørerne havde læst om problemet før jeg!).