Myth: VFD Output Cables Don't Need Special Treatment
VFD output cables carry high dV/dt PWM waveforms (up to 8kV/µs) that cause bearing currents, insulation stress from voltage reflections, and EMI radiation. Symmetrical cable construction, low capacitance, and proper shield termination are essential — not optional.
The Myth
“A VFD is just a motor starter. Use the same cable you’d use for a DOL motor — it carries the same current.”
This was arguably true for early six-step inverters. For modern IGBT-based PWM drives with switching frequencies of 4–16 kHz and voltage rise times of 50–200 ns, it is dangerously wrong. The cable between a VFD and its motor carries a waveform that looks nothing like a sinusoid, and it creates failure modes that do not exist in conventional motor circuits.
What VFD Output Actually Looks Like
A modern VFD output is a series of DC voltage pulses at the switching frequency (typically 4–8 kHz for LV drives). Each pulse has:
- Rise time: 50–200 ns (modern IGBTs)
- dV/dt: up to 5–8 kV/μs
- Peak voltage: 1.0–1.414 × DC bus voltage (565–800 V for a 400V drive)
- Common-mode voltage: oscillating between +VDC/2 and −VDC/2 at switching frequency
This is not an engineering nuance. It is a fundamentally different electrical stress regime on the cable and motor.
Three Failure Modes Standard Cables Cannot Handle
1. Bearing Currents
Common-mode voltage on the motor frame couples capacitively through the motor bearings to the shaft. At each switching edge, a displacement current pulse flows through the bearing oil film. Over millions of pulses per second, the bearing surfaces erode in a pattern called “fluting” — microscopic craters that eventually cause bearing failure, typically within 6–24 months.
IEC 60034-17, Section 7 describes this mechanism and recommends: insulated bearings (DE or NDE), shaft grounding brushes, and — critically — low-impedance, symmetrical cable with a continuous shield grounded at both ends to provide a low-impedance path for common-mode current.
2. Voltage Reflections and Insulation Stress
When a voltage pulse with 100 ns rise time travels down a cable, it reflects at the motor terminals (impedance mismatch). The reflected wave adds to the incident wave, producing peak voltage at the motor terminals up to 2× the DC bus voltage. For a 400V drive with 565V DC bus, the motor terminal voltage can spike to 1130V — well above the 600V insulation rating of standard PVC cables.
The critical cable length depends on rise time. For a 100 ns rise time:
Lcritical = v × trise / 2 ≈ 150 × 106 × 100 × 10−9 / 2 ≈ 7.5m
For cables longer than 7.5m (which is most installations), voltage doubling occurs. Above approximately 30m, the full 2× reflection is established. Cable insulation must withstand these repeated impulse voltages for the 20–30 year life of the installation — standard PVC/XLPE insulation systems are not rated for this duty.
3. Capacitive Leakage Current and EMI
The cable’s capacitance to ground (typically 100–250 pF/m for standard cables) creates a leakage current path at each switching edge:
Icap = C × dV/dt
For a 100m cable at 150 pF/m with dV/dt = 5 kV/μs:
Icap = (100 × 150 × 10−12) × (5 × 109) = 75A peak
This 75A peak capacitive current pulse — at every switching edge, 8,000–16,000 times per second — flows through the cable shield (if present) or radiates as EMI (if not). Without a proper shield, this current radiates into parallel signal cables, instrument loops, and communication networks. With a shield grounded at one end only, the shield carries the full current to one ground point, creating ground potential differences.
What VFD Output Cables Actually Need
A properly specified VFD output cable has these characteristics:
- Symmetrical construction: 3 phase conductors + 3 earth conductors (not 3C+E), arranged symmetrically so that capacitive coupling to the shield is balanced across all phases. This reduces common-mode current.
- Low capacitance: <200 pF/m preferred, achieved through XLPE or EPR insulation with appropriate wall thickness. Standard PVC cables typically have 150–300 pF/m; purpose-built VFD cables achieve 80–150 pF/m.
- Continuous shield: Copper braid or tape with ≥85% coverage, terminated at both ends with 360° compression glands — not pigtail connections. The shield provides a low-impedance return path for common-mode current, keeping it out of the building’s earthing system.
- Insulation rated for impulse voltage: The cable must withstand repeated voltage spikes up to 2× DC bus voltage. Some manufacturers specify “inverter duty” or “VFD rated” cables tested per IEC 60502 with additional impulse withstand requirements.
Try the Motor Calculator
Put this methodology into practice. Calculate results with full standard clause references — free, no sign-up required.
Or embed this calculator on your site