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Free Electrical Cable Sizing Tool & Calculator | TMUK Group Ltd

Professional Cable Calculator

BS 7671:2018+A3:2024 Compliant | Current Carrying Capacity & VD

1. Electrical Load
Amps
2. Circuit Details
Metres
3. Environmental Factors
Selected Cable Size -- Required Device (In): 0.00 A Capacity Limit (Iz): 0.00 A
Calculated Design Current (Ib) 0.00 A
Actual Voltage Drop 0.00 V Statutory Limit: --
Capacity Exceeded: The required load and correction factors exceed the maximum available standard cable size (400 mm²) in our database. Parallel conductors or a heavy industrial design may be required.
Voltage Drop Intervention: The calculated voltage drop exceeded statutory limits. The engine has automatically increased the cable cross-sectional area to maintain BS 7671 compliance.

The Science of Cable Sizing to BS 7671

Selecting the correct cross-sectional area (CSA) for an electrical cable is critical for fire safety and equipment efficiency. A cable that is too small will overheat, deteriorating the insulation and posing a severe fire risk. A cable that is too large incurs unnecessary financial costs and is difficult to terminate.

This engine strictly follows the methodologies laid out in BS 7671:2018+A3:2024 (Appendix 4) and implements the vital Ib ≤ In ≤ Iz equation.

1. Determining Current-Carrying Capacity (Iz)

A major flaw in basic calculators is sizing the cable exclusively to the Design Current (Ib). However, BS 7671 mandates that the cable must be protected by the fuse or circuit breaker (In). Therefore, the cable's current-carrying capacity (Iz) must be greater than or equal to the protective device, which in turn must be greater than the actual load.

  • Ambient Temperature (Ca): Standard tabulated values assume an ambient temperature of 30°C. If a cable is run through a hot boiler room (e.g., 40°C), its capacity drops significantly.
  • Grouping (Cg): When cables are bundled together (like in trunking or on a tray), they heat each other up. The more circuits grouped together, the lower the safe operating capacity of each individual cable.
  • Thermal Insulation (Ci): Cables buried in loft insulation cannot dissipate heat. Installation Method A strictly limits the current capacity compared to a cable clipped directly to a masonry wall (Method C).

2. The Voltage Drop Constraint

Even if a cable is thick enough to carry the current safely without overheating, it might still fail the Voltage Drop test over long distances. BS 7671 specifies that the voltage at the furthest point of the circuit must not drop below:

  • 3% (6.9 V on a 230 V supply) for Lighting circuits.
  • 5% (11.5 V on a 230 V supply) for Power and Motor circuits.

If the distance is extensive, this calculator will automatically over-size the cable beyond the thermal constraints to ensure the voltage remains within legal limits.

3. Practical Constraints & PVC vs. XLPE

Our engine assumes a minimum mechanical and practical cross-sectional area of 1.0mm² for Single Phase lighting circuits, and enforces a strict minimum of 2.5mm² for Three Phase power circuits to ensure robust installations and mechanical strength.

Thermoplastic (PVC) cables have a maximum operating temperature of 70°C. Thermosetting (XLPE or SWA) cables can operate safely up to 90°C, meaning a smaller XLPE cable can often carry the same current as a larger PVC cable. However, you must ensure that the switchgear and terminations at either end are also rated to withstand 90°C; otherwise, the cable must be derated to the 70°C parameters.

Professional Disclaimer: This TMUK Group Ltd tool computes the thermal and voltage drop requirements. It does not account for Earth Fault Loop Impedance (Zs) limits to ensure automatic disconnection of supply, nor does it calculate the adiabatic equation (I²t ≤ k²S²) for fault current withstand. All designs must be verified by a competent engineer.