Discover our switchboards designed to house all devices providing protection, control or monitoring at every node of your power distribution systems. They also connect power distribution to digital software, such as EcoStruxure Power, to better optimize power supply reliability, asset maintenance and energy efficiency.Get more news about Switchboard Enclosures,you can vist our website!
Prisma is the most convenient solution for panel builders, allowing them to seamlessly assemble switchboards, that perfectly fit every electrical architecture and operating conditions. Choose from small wall-mounted Prisma G panels, to large floor standing 4000 A supplied Prisma P boards.
Pragma and Prisma Pack enclosures offer all solutions to seamlessly fit and connect Acti9 devices, such as miniature circuit breakers and residual current devices, in usual indoors locations. Kaedra weatherproof enclosures shelter Acti9 devices from more stringent environments, be it outdoors, building works, or industrial atmospheres.
An electric switchboard is a device that distributes electricity from one or more sources of supply to several smaller load circuits. It is an assembly of one or more panels, each of which contains switching devices for the protection and control of circuits fed from the switchboard. Several manufacturers make switchboards used in industry, commercial buildings, telecommunication facilities, oil and gas plants, data centers, health care, and other buildings, and onboard large ships. A switchboard is divided into different interconnected sections, generally consisting of a main section and a distribution section. These two sections are sometimes replaced by a combination section, which is a section that can fulfill the roles of both aforementioned sections.[1] Switchboards can also sometimes come with an auxiliary section that is used to house devices that cannot be housed in the same section as other devices.[2]

The U.S. National Electrical Code (NEC) defines a switchboard as "a large single panel, frame, or assembly of panels on which are mounted, on the face, back, or both, switches, over-current and other protective devices, buses, and usually instruments".[3] The role of a switchboard is to allow the division of the current supplied to the switchboard into smaller currents for further distribution and to provide switching, current protection and (possibly) metering for those various currents. In general, switchboards may distribute power to transformers, panelboards, control equipment, and, ultimately, to individual system loads.