11 min read
TRX Editorial Team
Reading Specifications
Electrical specifications for industrial installations typically identify IEC 60309 products through a structured code that encodes all the key parameters. Understanding how to read this code quickly and accurately is a fundamental skill for any contractor working on industrial projects. A typical specification reference might appear as: “IEC 60309-2, 32 A, 3P+N+E, 400 V, IP67, 6h” — each element carrying a specific meaning.
The “6h” at the end refers to the keying position of the earthing contact — a clock-face notation that ensures only products with identical keying will mate. The earthing contact position varies with voltage and frequency to prevent cross-connection between circuits of different voltage. For 400 V 50 Hz three-phase circuits, 6h is the standard position corresponding to red-coloured connectors. For 230 V 50 Hz single-phase, 6h is also standard, corresponding to blue. The 4h position corresponds to yellow 110 V RLV connectors.
Always verify that both the plug and the socket carry the same keying notation before installation. A mismatch will prevent engagement, but discovering this during installation rather than at the ordering stage causes costly delays.
Site Survey Checklist
Before specifying or ordering any IEC 60309 products for a site installation, complete a structured site survey. The following checklist covers the information required to make correct product selections.
Supply Voltage and Frequency
Confirm from the distribution board — do not assume. Note whether any areas are on RLV (110 V) or specialist supply.
Maximum Load Current
Identify all connected loads from equipment schedules. Calculate diversity-adjusted maximum demand for each circuit.
Environmental Classification
Photograph each installation location. Note exposure to rain, dust, chemicals, UV, temperature extremes, mechanical impact and flooding risk.
Usage Frequency
Will the connection be permanent, monthly, daily or multiple times per day? High cycle-count applications need heavy-duty locking rings.
Specifying the Right Socket
With site survey data in hand, complete the connector specification using the five-step method: current rating, pole configuration, voltage/keying, IP class, material specification. Document each decision and its justification in the project technical file — this documentation is required for compliance with the Low Voltage Directive and will be needed for any future inspection, insurance claim or incident investigation.
Installation Standards: IEC and EN Requirements
IEC 60309-1 covers the general requirements for plugs, socket-outlets, vehicle connectors and vehicle inlets. IEC 60309-2 covers the dimensional requirements for interchangeability for pin-and-sleeve devices. Both parts are adopted identically as EN 60309-1 and EN 60309-2 in Europe. Installation must also comply with IEC 60364 (Electrical installations of buildings) and relevant national amendments — BS 7671 in the UK, VDE 0100 in Germany, CEI 64-8 in Italy.
Testing Protocol
Before energisation, every new IEC 60309 installation must be tested to verify electrical integrity. The minimum test sequence for a new installation includes: continuity of protective earthing conductors (maximum 0.05 Ω to any accessible metalwork); insulation resistance (minimum 1 MΩ at 500 V DC between live conductors and earth); polarity verification (live connected to brass centre pin in single-phase connectors); and RCD (residual current device) operation test where RCDs are fitted.
For 63 A and 125 A installations, a load test at rated current for a minimum of one hour is recommended to verify contact temperature rise. Contact resistance should be measured at full load current using a calibrated milliohm meter — values above 0.5 mΩ indicate inadequate contact pressure and require investigation before the installation is commissioned.
Commissioning Sign-Off
Commissioning sign-off requires completion of all test documentation, confirmation that all products are installed per manufacturer instructions, verification that all CE documentation is in the project file, and client handover of the as-built drawings, test certificates and product data sheets. In the UK, this requires completion of an Electrical Installation Certificate (EIC) or Minor Works Certificate as appropriate. In Italy, the Dichiarazione di Conformita (DOC) must be issued within 30 days of completion.
The Compliance File
A complete compliance file for an IEC 60309 installation should contain: specification documents with design justifications; product Declarations of Conformity (DoC) for all IEC 60309 products installed; test certificates with dated and signed test results; as-built drawings showing socket locations, circuit references and cable routes; and the installer’s qualifications or accreditation certificates.
This file must be retained by the client for the life of the installation. In the event of an insurance claim, accident investigation or regulatory inspection, the compliance file is the primary evidence that the installation was designed, specified and installed correctly. An incomplete or missing compliance file substantially increases the contractor’s liability exposure.
When to Upgrade an Existing Installation
Existing IEC 60309 installations should be reviewed for upgrade when: load has increased beyond 80% of the connector current rating; the installation environment has changed (new washdown area, outdoor conversion); products approaching end of service life show cracked bodies, degraded seals or elevated contact resistance; regulatory requirements have changed for the industry sector; or the existing products are uncertified and CE documentation cannot be produced. TRX offers a free technical audit service for existing installations — contact the technical team via trx-elettrico.it/.

