Usually DC equipment that violates bending space requirements such as that designed and built by GE uses DLO. It’s pretty common in DC applications.
It is dual rated as RHH/RHW-2 which is an allowable NEC type, 90 C wet or dry. It can be run in trays if it is listed for TC use on the jacket. But it is not and never has been rated for exposed runs outside of some kind of raceway. It also requires special lugs for fine strand and due to the nonstandard diameters make sure you get the right lugs. A 500 MCM lug does not go on 535 MCM DLO.
If you look at the use cases though lots of people violate this a lot but it’s not to Code. It is a NEMA cable rating so NEC is highly biased against it. It is intended mostly for mobile uses which fall outside NEC scope but the DC guys tend to ignore that. I’ve seen SHD-GC and drill rig cable types drift over into NEC land too. I don’t honestly see any NEC cable types hold up to years of being drug through crushed rocky mud and gravel. They treat every cable as something to be boxed in.
A better choice is type TC-ER or in smaller sizes type MC. Both are exposed run rated so they can run in or out of trays if properly supported, they are available in fine strand if you shop around (see Service Wire Company, Houston Wire, Amercable/Nexans), but you have the choice to just use coarse strand standard type B construction. You can get “VFD” cable with a 2 kV rating this way. The only thing you give up is the tinned coating that is highly overrated.