OK superb. Thanks guys. I wanted to be super confident that we were looking at the one (and only one) pole indicated by
@flarkey in this image below, which he has shown with a blue line. The only one visible on the 45m expanse. The reason I think this is so important is because there isn't a single tree around. Literally the only conceivable reason we could see multiple-point arching on a 45m expanse of LV cable (for at least 6 mins) would be trees/vegetation because 230v cannot create free-air arcs mid-span, faults only arc at direct contact points, such as damaged insulation or branches touching the line. Yet
there are no trees, or vegetation near the identified cable span, meaning there's no source of intermittent contact that could create multiple fault points. For six separate illuminated points to appear, the cable would need
multiple simultaneous defects along the span. That's several locations with insulation damage or conductor contact
all producing intermittent arcing without burning clear.
You'd also need a combination of multi-point damage, sustained fault current, non-operation (or perfectly
tuned partial operation) of 160 A protection...And yet no trees.
Of course you could say one of those trees furthest to the yellow line has taken out a pole (the yellow one maybe?) or one of the trees has been blown over in the storm and damaged the cable at multiple points causing damage at multiple points - hence the arching seen?
OK, so the cable has been damaged and trees down? Or a pole has been taken out.
But the DNO has confirmed that the
only thing replaced to resolve the "sparking" reported (8 hours after the footage was captured at the horizon point that everyone in Denbigh could see) is two insulator reels and a 160a fuse. They didn't replace the cable that was damaged in multiple points, or the pole taken down? Or the trees laying over the line?
Can you imagine a situation where the insulation on a cable that long has been damaged in multiple locations (risk to life stuff) and they don't replace the cable? That would be Health and Safety Executive action, huge fines and potential lawsuits/danger of death to customers on something like that.
And the DNO confirmed, very categorically, that the works took just 1hr and 52 minutes to fix it and restore the supply to the customers effected. It takes me that long to find the right tools and faff about with the SWA glanding and termination.
Seems highly improbable.
Flarkey's email from the DNO, post-event, shows the only changes were
two insulator reels and a single 160 A fuse – exactly what you'd expect from
one localised fault at or near an insulator (that the reporting person has seen sparking (probably 8hrs later) not from
six independent arcing sites spread across 45 m of cable.
Again, how would the witness know the it was sparking if they didn't see it at the time sparking along a 45m expanse? Or is it still sparking 8hrs later? No chance.
Which means you have identified the line of sigh (the horizon) and a cable in that area. That's pretty confident stuff. But then, there is cable in every single direction on earth, layers and layers of it. So that's not difficult to do.
Then we have the problem that there is no insulator reels before or after the "fault" on the identified line/pole (in image above in blue). So the DNO is wrong, or we are shelving this data to help us fit the hypothesis?
(insulator reels reminder)
In order for it to be this LV line as a confirmed resolution to this case, the DNO would need to have replaced the damaged cable and there would be insulator reels identified in place before and/or after the event. And it would need to be surrounded by trees. Unless some other object at 7-9 meters high has damaged 6 different points across the line?
We have a line of sight and a probability that there is LV or HV cable across any line of sight anywhere in the world (where people are living) and you have 1.4km in which to find one. You had 100 acres (roughly as a location from the DNO). There are not other factors that make this the resolution.
The science/probability from an electrical perspective is near impossible without these factors on an LV line, not only the damage issue, but also the breakers/fuse failing, arching/sparking for 6 mins minimum.
I don't think the LV line is the cause of the "Denbigh Lights" and I think if you're honest you'll agree that the data doesn't fit that as a resolution either.
What we have confirmed is that the lights are coming from just above the horizon.
What the DNO email/letter tells us is that they fixed a single point fault at an insulator reel, near to a transformer with a 160a fuse. 11 kV/400 V transformer. Something like this:
Coincidentally this pole is an example of a pole with a relevant transformer/160a fuse and insulator reels from google street view outside of Coppy Farm (within the DNOs postcode). There isn't one anywhere near the LOS or the elevation of your target location.