BS 7671 Voltage Drop
BS 7671 Voltage Drop
BS 7671 Voltage Drop
Article
Discussion
BS 7671 , Appendix 4 (Informative), gives a procedure for calculating the voltage drop in low
voltage cables. This procedure is based on looking up resistive and reactive voltage drops in a table
and determining the cable voltage drop from these values.
Only the resistance of the cable is affected by temperature. To correct the for the operating
temperature of the cable, we can use:
Ct=230+tp−(C2aC2gC2sC2d−I2bI2t)(tp−30)230+tpCt=230+tp-Ca2Cg2Cs2Cd2-Ib2It2tp-30230+tp
tp - the maximum permitted normal operating temperature of the cable
Ib - design current of the circuit (current intended to be carried by the cable)
It - value to tabulated current (BS 7671 appendix 4, tables)
Ca - rating factor for ambient temperature
Cg - rating factor for grouping
Cs - rating factor for soil thermal resistivity
Cd - rating factor for depth of burial
Combining the temperature correction factor, with the power factor,cos(ϕ)cos(ϕ) the voltage drop
(in mV) is given by:
vd =Ib*L*Ct cos(ϕ) (tabluated(mV/A/m)r) + sin(ϕ) (tabulated(mV/A/m)x)vd =I
b*L*Ct cos(ϕ) (tabluated(mV/A/m)r) + sin(ϕ) (tabulated(mV/A/m)x)
vd - voltage drop across the cable in mV (divide by 1000 for V)
cos(ϕ)cos(ϕ) - the power factor of the circuit
L - length of the cable, m
Note: power factor is 1 and the tabulated (mV/A/m)x is 0 for a d.c. circuit. For cable CSA less than
16 mm2, BS 7671 ignores inductance and (mV/A/m)x can be taken as zero. For three phase circuits,
the voltage drop is related to the line-line voltage - to relate to the line-neutral voltage divide by √3.
To obtain the voltage drop as a percentage, divide by the nominal voltage for d.c. circuits, the line-
neutral voltage for single phase circuits and the line-line voltage for three phase circuits.
From BS 7671 Appendix 4, Table 4Ab, the voltage drop between the origin of any installation and
load point should not be greater than:
Low voltage installation supplied directly from a public LV distribution system
Note: for installation runs longer than 100 m, the above can be increased by 0.005% per metre
beyond 100m, without any increase being greater than 0.5%.
Example Calculation
To illustrate the above, consider a single core, 50 mm2 copper XLPE armoured cable, supplying a
400 V three phase load of 152 A with pf=0.87. Assume the cable is installed in trefoil on a ladder
with an ambient of 35 °C, not grouped with any other cables and 80 m in length.
To view the detailed calculation for the cable, please see BS 7671 Voltage Drop Calculation. This
calculation shows that the absolute voltage drop is 10.06 V (referenced to the line-line voltage). As a
percentage the voltage drop is 2.52%.
myCableEngineering.com - sizing the same cable with myCableEngineering, using a generic cable
gives the same voltage drop (10.07 V and 2.52%). Using a BS 6724 cable gives 2.46%. These types
of variation are due to BS 7671 using a one-size-fits-all approach, whereas in myCableEngineering
voltage drop is calculated based on each cables actual physical characteristics.
Given values of voltage drop for three phase balanced systems are related to the line voltage.