In the wire and cable industry of China, product models are not random strings — they are a coded language that describes the conductor, insulation, sheath, shielding, and special properties of the cable. Mastering this code helps engineers, purchasers, and installers quickly identify the right product for the job.
Part 1: Common Letter Symbols and Their Meanings
Below is a breakdown of the most frequently encountered letter codes in Chinese-standard cable nomenclature:
|
Symbol |
Meaning |
|---|---|
|
R |
Flexible connecting cable/wire (stranded soft structure) |
|
V |
PVC (Polyvinyl Chloride) insulation (when appearing as 1st V) |
|
V |
PVC sheath (when appearing as 2nd V) |
|
B |
Flat (flat-shaped cross-section) |
|
S |
Twisted pair / twin-twist structure |
|
A |
Tinned or silver-plated conductor |
|
F |
High temperature resistance |
|
P |
Braided shielding |
|
P2 |
Copper tape shielding |
|
P22 |
Steel tape armoring |
|
Y |
Prefabricated type (often omitted); or polyolefin sheath |
|
FD |
Product category code for branch cable (the upcoming MOHURD standard uses FZ, which is essentially identical) |
|
YJ |
XLPE (Cross-linked Polyethylene) insulation |
|
ZR |
Flame retardant |
|
NH |
Fire resistant |
|
WDZ |
Halogen-free, low-smoke, flame-retardant |
|
WDN |
Halogen-free, low-smoke, fire-resistant |
Note: The letter V deserves special attention — it can denote bothPVC insulation and PVC sheath depending on its position in the model. Typically, the first V refers to insulation and the second V refers to the sheath (e.g., RVV = PVC insulated + PVC sheathed flexible cable).
Part 2: Common Cable Models and Descriptions
Flexible Connecting Wires (R Series)
|
Model |
Description |
|---|---|
|
RV |
Copper core PVC insulated connecting flexible cable (wire) |
|
AVR |
Tinned copper core polyethylene insulated flat connecting flexible cable (wire) |
|
RVB |
Copper core PVC insulated flat connecting wire |
|
RVS |
Copper core PVC insulated twisted connecting wire |
|
RVV |
Copper core PVC insulated and PVC sheathed round flexible connecting cable |
|
ARVV |
Tinned copper core PVC insulated and PVC sheathed flat connecting flexible cable |
|
RVVB |
Copper core PVC insulated and PVC sheathed flat connecting flexible cable |
|
RV-105 |
Copper core heat-resistant 105°C PVC insulated flexible connecting cable |
High-Temperature & Specialty Wires
|
Model |
Description |
|---|---|
|
AF-205 |
Silver-plated conductor, fluoroplastic insulated, high-temp flexible wire (−60°C ~ 250°C) |
|
AFS-250 |
Silver-plated conductor, fluoroplastic insulated, high-temp flexible wire (−60°C ~ 250°C) |
|
AFP-250 |
Silver-plated conductor, fluoroplastic insulated, high-temp flexible wire (−60°C ~ 250°C) |
These three models (AF-205, AFS-250, AFP-250) share the same core construction — silver-plated copper with fluoroplastic (PTFE/FEP) insulation — designed for continuous operation from −60°C up to 250°C. They are widely used in aerospace, industrial heating, and high-temperature electronic equipment.
Part 3: Reading a Model — Step by Step
Let's decode a few examples using the symbol table above:
Example 1: RVVP
|
Letter |
Meaning |
|---|---|
|
R |
Flexible connecting |
|
V |
PVC insulation |
|
V |
PVC sheath |
|
P |
Braided shield |
→ Stranded flexible copper cable, PVC insulated, PVC sheathed, with braided shielding.
Example 2: WDZ-YJY
|
Letter |
Meaning |
|---|---|
|
WDZ |
Halogen-free, low-smoke, flame-retardant |
|
YJ |
XLPE insulation |
|
Y |
Polyolefin sheath |
→ Halogen-free low-smoke flame-retardant XLPE insulated polyolefin sheathed cable — commonly used in high-rise buildings, subways, and other public spaces where smoke toxicity must be minimized during a fire.
Example 3: NH-VV22
|
Letter |
Meaning |
|---|---|
|
NH |
Fire resistant |
|
V |
PVC insulation |
|
V |
PVC sheath |
|
22 |
Steel tape armoring |
→ Fire-resistant PVC insulated and sheathed steel-tape-armored cable — suitable for direct burial where circuit integrity during fire is critical.
Key Takeaways
-
Position matters — the same letter (e.g., V) can mean different things depending on where it appears in the model.
-
Prefixes carry safety significance — ZR, NH, WDZ, and WDN directly relate to fire safety performance and should never be substituted casually.
-
Conductor codes — absence of L means copper; A prefix indicates tinned or silver-plated for corrosion resistance or high-temperature service.
-
When in doubt, consult the standard — GB/T, JB/T, and industry-specific standards provide definitive specifications for each model.
Pro Tip: For critical applications such as fire alarm circuits, emergency lighting, or underground direct burial, always verify not just the model designation but also the corresponding certification, test reports, and compliance with local electrical codes before procurement.