IEC 60715 DIN Rail (TS35/TH35) Standard: Dimensions + Cabinet Layout Rules Panel Builders Actually Use
IEC/EN 60715 defines the mechanical profiles for common DIN rails—especially the 35 mm “top-hat” rail (TS35/TH35). In practice, engineers search this standard to confirm rail type, key dimensions (35×7.5 vs 35×15), and mounting hole patterns, so parts from different vendors snap on consistently. What IEC 60715 does not fully define is your entire cabinet spacing plan— that’s usually driven by component datasheets, service access needs, and U.S. control panel requirements (often UL 508A-related). This guide shows the rail basics plus the spacing habits panel builders use to avoid rework.
- TS35 vs TH35 vs “NS 35”: same family name, different catalog language.
- How to choose 35×7.5 vs 35×15: clearance, stiffness, and “hands-on wiring” reality.
- How to mount, cut, deburr, and lock rails so devices don’t creep or rattle loose.
- A practical cabinet spacing checklist: wire duct clearance, thermal breathing room, and zoning.
1) What IEC 60715 actually standardizes (and what it doesn’t)
If you’ve ever mixed a terminal block from one vendor with a breaker from another and still expected everything to snap onto the same rail, you’ve benefited from DIN rail standardization. IEC/EN 60715 is the mechanical “fit agreement” for common rail profiles used in industrial control cabinets: it focuses on the rail’s geometry so that mounting feet and spring clips work consistently.
That said, many people over-assume what the standard covers. IEC 60715 helps answer questions like: “Is this the 35 mm top-hat profile?”, “Is it the 7.5 mm or 15 mm depth version?”, and “Does my rail match typical slotted/perforated mounting?” But cabinet layout spacing—how far your wire duct sits from the rail, how much service access you leave above a power supply, or how you separate noisy power devices from I/O—usually comes from component instructions, thermal reality, and your target inspection context.
Practical takeaway: treat IEC 60715 as the “rail profile baseline,” then build spacing rules from the devices you mount and the standards your finished cabinet must satisfy.
2) TS35 vs TH35 vs “NS 35”: a naming cheat sheet
In the U.S., engineers often say TS35 DIN rail. In many European catalogs you’ll see TH35 (top-hat 35 mm), and some vendors label rails as NS 35. In practice, these terms usually point to the same “35 mm top-hat” family, but the exact part still matters because vendors may vary slotting, coatings, and length.
You may also run into other rail shapes (less common in modern U.S. cabinets). The key is to confirm the profile your device mounting foot expects. When in doubt, check the datasheet: most DIN-rail components specify “EN/IEC 60715” and the rail size.
3) Key dimensions you’ll see on real parts: 35×7.5, 35×15, slots & pitch
3.1 35×7.5: the common default for everyday DIN mounting
The most common top-hat rail in control cabinets is the 35 mm wide, 7.5 mm deep variant. It’s widely available, cost-effective, and compatible with most DIN-rail terminal blocks, relays, and many DIN-rail power supplies. Vendors often sell it in 1 m or 2 m lengths (you cut to fit), in either plain (unperforated) or slotted/perforated versions.
If your cabinet is dense and you’re frequently wiring by hand, 35×7.5 is often “enough”—but you still need to plan for wiring access: the rail size doesn’t magically create finger clearance above a tall power supply or behind a deep breaker.
3.2 35×15: deeper rail for stiffness, mounting confidence, and a bit more working room
The 35×15 top-hat rail is deeper (taller profile), which typically increases stiffness and can feel more stable in long spans. Some builders prefer it when devices are heavier, when vibration is a concern, or when they want a little more “stand-off” from the backplate. It’s not a cure-all—but it can make a cabinet feel less flimsy during wiring and service.
Rule of thumb: if you’re fighting crowded wiring space, you usually fix that with layout (duct placement, zoning, and service clearance), not by swapping rail depth alone.
3.3 Slotted/perforated rails: why “25 mm pitch” shows up so often
When you’re mounting rails to a backplate, the rail itself may be slotted (oval slots) so you can align screws quickly. Many commonly stocked perforated rails list a 25 mm drill-hole spacing, which makes it easier to land fasteners without custom drilling and helps match common accessory brackets.
Building a cabinet that’s easy to wire and inspect is mostly about layout discipline. If you’re also designing the 24V control power system, see: Planning DC Power Architecture for Industrial Control Cabinets.
4) Installation basics: cut, deburr, mount, and lock
4.1 Tools you actually need (and why they matter)
A DIN rail installation looks simple until it causes downstream pain: devices creep sideways, sharp burrs cut wire insulation, or the rail sits just close enough to the duct that you can’t land a screwdriver. The basic “pro” tool list is short: a caliper or ruler (verify size), a rail cutter or fine-tooth saw (clean cut), a deburring tool/file (no razor edges), and a torque screwdriver (repeatable fastener torque).
If you’re drilling the backplate, add a center punch and a step bit. If you’re in production, consider a cutting jig so every rail is identical— it keeps assembly time predictable and makes QC easier.
4.2 End stops, labels, and “don’t rely on the rail as a busbar”
Use end stops/end clamps to prevent terminal blocks and DIN-mount devices from migrating. For serviceability, leave enough space for labels and marker strips, and plan a “parking gap” at the rail end for future additions. If protective earth bonding is required, follow your component and enclosure grounding instructions—many rails are zinc-plated steel and may provide a chassis bond path, but you should not treat the rail as a current-carrying busbar.
5) Cabinet layout spacing rules that prevent rework
5.1 Wire duct clearance: design for the screwdriver, not just the CAD model
In CAD, it’s tempting to place wire duct as close as possible to a rail to “save space.” In reality, you need clearance for: wire bend radius, ferrules, marker sleeves, and the tool angle for tightening terminals. A practical rule is to mock up one “worst case” device (deep power supply or dense terminal block row) and confirm you can land the top and bottom terminals without fighting the duct wall. If you can’t comfortably wire it, your technicians will either reroute wires messily or request a redesign.
5.2 Thermal spacing: keep hot devices from cooking the quiet ones
Cabinets are not uniform temperature fields. Heat rises, so high-loss devices mounted near the top often run warmer. Leave breathing room around power supplies, contactors, and braking resistors, and avoid stacking heat sources tightly. Many vendors specify orientation and minimum clearances—use those as the “must meet” baseline, then add service margin.
5.3 Zoning: separate noisy power from sensitive I/O (and make troubleshooting easier)
Even when everything is “on DIN rail,” you should plan zones: incoming AC + protection, DC power conversion, distribution/terminal blocks, I/O and control. Zoning improves EMC outcomes, makes wiring more readable, and reduces accidental cross-talk. For U.S. builds, this also helps when you need to explain routing logic during inspection or troubleshooting.
Want a second set of eyes on your cabinet plan before you cut metal? TPS can help review rail selection, DC distribution, wiring approach, and compliance targets.
6) US-market cross-check: where IEC 60715 fits with UL/NEC/NFPA context
For U.S. projects, it helps to frame IEC 60715 correctly: it’s primarily about mechanical interchangeability of rails and snap-mount devices. If your end product is an industrial control panel that needs listing/inspection readiness, you’ll typically also care about component approvals, wiring methods, spacing/clearance principles, grounding, labeling, and documentation workflows aligned to U.S. practice.
The practical move is to treat IEC 60715 as the “rail baseline,” then build a short design record: rail type and size, device list and mounting orientation, wire duct plan, and any vendor-required clearances. This saves time when you revise the layout or need to explain your design intent to an integrator, customer, or test lab.
7) Fast checklist + common mistakes
Quick checklist (print this for design review)
- Rail selection: Confirm profile (TS35/TH35) and depth (35×7.5 vs 35×15) matches device datasheets.
- Mounting pattern: Verify slotted/perforated type and hole pattern before drilling the backplate.
- Edge quality: Cut ends square and deburr—no sharp edges near wiring.
- Device retention: Use end stops; leave a small “future expansion” gap where helpful.
- Tool access: Can a technician land every terminal with a screwdriver without fighting the duct?
- Thermal plan: Avoid stacking heat sources; keep breathing room per vendor requirements.
- Zoning: Separate power/protection, DC conversion, distribution/terminals, and control/I/O.
- Documentation: Record rail type, layout intent, and any special clearances for repeat builds.
Common mistakes that cause rework: (1) placing wire duct too tight to the rail (no tool angle), (2) skipping end stops (devices drift), (3) ignoring vendor clearance/orientation notes for hot devices, and (4) mixing naming assumptions (buying a rail that’s “TS35” but not the slotting/length you expected).
8) Work with TPS: layout review + integration + compliance support
If you’re building a U.S.-market cabinet and want fewer surprises, TPS can support the parts that usually create schedule risk: rail-mounted power supply integration, DC distribution planning, wiring documentation, and pre-compliance checks when EMC/safety targets matter.
Tip: If you share your backplate drawing (PDF/DWG) and a device list, a layout review can usually identify “tool access” and “thermal crowding” issues before they become build rework.
FAQ
Does IEC 60715 define cabinet spacing (wire duct clearance, service space, etc.)?
Not fully. IEC 60715 primarily standardizes DIN rail profiles for mechanical compatibility. Cabinet spacing is typically determined by device datasheets (clearance/orientation), service access needs, and the requirements of the standards and inspection context for your finished panel.
Should I choose 35×7.5 or 35×15 DIN rail?
35×7.5 is the common default and works for most cabinets. 35×15 adds depth (stiffness/stand-off) and can feel more stable in long spans or dense builds. Choose based on device weight, vibration, and whether the extra stand-off helps wiring access in your layout.
Is “TS35 DIN rail” the same as “TH35”?
Often yes in everyday usage—both usually point to the 35 mm top-hat rail family. But always confirm the exact variant (7.5 vs 15 depth), slotting/perforation, coating, and length on the part number you’re purchasing.
Is 25 mm hole spacing always the same on slotted rails?
Many common perforated rails list a 25 mm drill-hole spacing, but not all rails use the same pattern. Treat pitch as a “verify on the exact part” item—especially if you’re trying to match pre-punched backplates or brackets.
Can I ground through the DIN rail?
The rail may provide a chassis bond path depending on materials and mounting method, but you should follow enclosure grounding and component guidance. Don’t treat the rail as a current-carrying busbar; use proper protective earth bonding methods required by your design and standards.
Can TPS review my cabinet DIN-rail layout before I build?
Yes. If you send a backplate drawing and your device list, TPS can flag access/spacing/thermal pain points early and suggest an integration plan. Use Contact Us to start.
External reference links used for definitions/dimensions (set nofollow when publishing if desired): Phoenix Contact NS 35/7.5, Phoenix Contact NS 35/15.
