Worked Example: Industrial Motor Feeder — 75 kW DOL Motor, 150 m Run
Step-by-step motor feeder cable sizing for a 75 kW direct-on-line motor with a 150 m cable run under four international standards. Covers starting current, voltage drop at starting, derating factors, and multi-standard comparison across AS/NZS 3008, BS 7671, IEC 60364, and NEC.
Scenario
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Motor | 75 kW, three-phase, 4-pole squirrel cage induction motor |
| Supply voltage | 400 V three-phase, 50 Hz (415 V for AS/NZS) |
| Efficiency | 0.935 (IE3 premium efficiency, IEC 60034-30-1) |
| Power factor (running) | 0.86 lagging |
| Starting method | Direct on line (DOL) |
| Starting current ratio | Ist / IFL = 7.5 (nameplate locked-rotor current) |
| Starting duration | 12 seconds to full speed (high-inertia fan load) |
| Starting power factor | 0.25 (locked rotor) |
| Cable route length | 150 m (MCC to motor terminal box) |
| Installation method | Multicore cable on perforated cable tray, with 5 other circuits |
| Ambient temperature | 45°C (steel mill environment) |
| Cable type | XLPE insulated, copper conductor, 90°C rated |
| Soil / enclosure | Open tray, horizontal, no direct sun exposure |
This example calculates cable size under AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017, BS 7671:2018+A2, IEC 60364-5-52, and NEC/NFPA 70:2023. The 150 m route length makes this a borderline case where voltage drop during motor starting — not steady-state current capacity — may govern cable selection.
Step 1: Calculate Motor Full-Load Current (I_FL)
For a three-phase induction motor:
IFL = P / (√3 × V × PF × η) — (Eq. 1)
Under AS/NZS (415 V):
IFL = 75,000 / (√3 × 415 × 0.86 × 0.935)
IFL = 75,000 / (1.732 × 415 × 0.86 × 0.935)
IFL = 75,000 / 578.0
IFL = 129.8 A
Under BS 7671 / IEC / NEC (400 V):
IFL = 75,000 / (√3 × 400 × 0.86 × 0.935)
IFL = 75,000 / 557.0
IFL = 134.6 A
Step 2: Calculate Starting Current
For DOL starting with Ist/IFL = 7.5:
Istart = 7.5 × IFL — (Eq. 2)
| Standard | IFL (A) | Istart (A) |
|---|---|---|
| AS/NZS 3008 | 129.8 | 973 |
| BS 7671 | 134.6 | 1,010 |
| IEC 60364 | 134.6 | 1,010 |
| NEC | 134.6 | 1,010 |
The starting current of approximately 1,000 A persists for 12 seconds as the high-inertia fan load accelerates to full speed. During this period, the cable must deliver the starting current without excessive voltage drop at the motor terminals.
Step 3: Determine Derating Factors
Each standard has different reference conditions and derating tables.
AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017
Ambient temperature correction (k1):
Reference ambient = 40°C. Actual = 45°C.
From AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017, Table 22, Row 45°C, Column 90°C XLPE:
k1 = 0.95
Grouping correction (k2):
6 circuits on perforated cable tray, touching.
From AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017, Table 24, Row: 6 multicore cables on tray:
k2 = 0.73
Combined derating:
ktotal = k1 × k2 = 0.95 × 0.73 = 0.694 — (Eq. 3a)
BS 7671:2018+A2
Ambient temperature correction (Ca):
Reference ambient = 30°C. Actual = 45°C.
From BS 7671, Table C.1, Row 45°C, Column 90°C XLPE:
Ca = 0.87
Grouping correction (Cg):
6 circuits on perforated cable tray (Reference Method E).
From BS 7671, Table C.3, Row: 6 multicore on tray, touching:
Cg = 0.73
Combined derating:
Ctotal = Ca × Cg = 0.87 × 0.73 = 0.635 — (Eq. 3b)
IEC 60364-5-52
Ambient temperature correction:
Reference ambient = 30°C (same as BS 7671).
From IEC 60364-5-52, Table B.52.14, Row 45°C, Column 90°C XLPE:
Ca = 0.87
Grouping correction:
From IEC 60364-5-52, Table B.52.17, 6 multicore on tray:
Cg = 0.73
Combined derating:
Ctotal = 0.87 × 0.73 = 0.635 — (Eq. 3c)
NEC/NFPA 70:2023
Temperature correction:
From NEC Table 310.15(B)(1), 90°C column, 45°C ambient:
Ca = 0.87
Adjustment for conduit/raceway grouping:
From NEC 310.15(C)(1), Table 310.15(C)(1), 6 current-carrying conductors. For cable tray per NEC 392.80(A)(1)(a), cables rated 2,000 V or less, 6 multiconductor cables on a single-layer tray:
Cg = 0.80 (NEC 392 is more generous for open cable tray)
Continuous load factor: NEC 430.22 requires motor branch circuit conductors to have ampacity not less than 125% of the motor full-load current:
Fcont = 1.25
Combined effective derating:
Ctotal = Ca × Cg / Fcont = 0.87 × 0.80 / 1.25 = 0.557 — (Eq. 3d)
Step 4: Calculate Required Cable Current Rating and Select Cable
The cable must have a tabulated current-carrying capacity (before derating) that satisfies:
Iz ≥ IFL / ktotal — (Eq. 4)
For NEC, the requirement is:
Iz ≥ (1.25 × IFL) / (Ca × Cg)
| Standard | IFL (A) | ktotal | Required Iz (A) | Table Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AS/NZS 3008 | 129.8 | 0.694 | 187.0 | Table 13, Col 17 (tray, XLPE) |
| BS 7671 | 134.6 | 0.635 | 212.0 | Table 4E4A, Method E |
| IEC 60364 | 134.6 | 0.635 | 212.0 | Table B.52.5, Method E |
| NEC | 134.6 | 0.557 | 241.7 | Table 310.16, 90°C |
Cable selection from each standard’s tables:
| Standard | Required Iz (A) | Cable Size | Tabulated Rating (A) | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AS/NZS 3008 | 187.0 | 70 mm² | 196 A (Table 13, Col 17) | +4.8% |
| BS 7671 | 212.0 | 95 mm² | 238 A (Table 4E4A, Method E) | +12.3% |
| IEC 60364 | 212.0 | 95 mm² | 238 A (Table B.52.5) | +12.3% |
| NEC | 241.7 | 4/0 AWG (107 mm²) | 260 A (Table 310.16) | +7.6% |
First surprise: Based on current capacity alone, AS/NZS selects 70 mm², BS/IEC select 95 mm², and NEC selects 4/0 AWG (107 mm²). The NEC result is 53% more copper than AS/NZS. But we have not checked voltage drop yet.
Step 5: Voltage Drop at Running Current
For a three-phase circuit, voltage drop is calculated using the impedance method:
ΔV = √3 × IFL × L × (r × cos(φ) + x × sin(φ)) / 1000 — (Eq. 5)
Where r and x are the resistance and reactance per unit length (mΩ/m), and φ is the load power factor angle (cos(φ) = 0.86, sin(φ) = 0.51).
70 mm² (AS/NZS selection):
From AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017, Table 35, 70 mm², XLPE copper, three-phase:
r = 0.321 mΩ/m, x = 0.110 mΩ/m
ΔV = 1.732 × 129.8 × 150 × (0.321 × 0.86 + 0.110 × 0.51) / 1000
ΔV = 33,730 × 0.332 / 1000
ΔV = 11.20 V = 2.70% (of 415 V)
95 mm² (BS 7671 / IEC selection):
From BS 7671, Table 4E2B, 95 mm²:
r = 0.236 mΩ/m, x = 0.110 mΩ/m
ΔV = 1.732 × 134.6 × 150 × (0.236 × 0.86 + 0.110 × 0.51) / 1000
ΔV = 34,979 × 0.259 / 1000
ΔV = 9.06 V = 2.27% (of 400 V)
4/0 AWG / 107 mm² (NEC selection):
From NEC Chapter 9, Table 9, 4/0 AWG copper:
r = 0.203 mΩ/m, x = 0.110 mΩ/m
ΔV = 1.732 × 134.6 × 150 × (0.203 × 0.86 + 0.110 × 0.51) / 1000
ΔV = 34,979 × 0.231 / 1000
ΔV = 8.08 V = 2.02% (of 400 V)
All selections pass the running voltage drop limits (AS/NZS 3000 Cl. 3.6.2: 5%, BS 7671 Appendix 12: 5%, IEC 60364-5-52 Cl. 525: 5%, NEC 215.2 Informational Note: 5%).
Step 6: Voltage Drop at Starting Current — The Critical Check
This is where the 150 m route length becomes decisive. At starting, the power factor drops to 0.25 (cos(φ) = 0.25, sin(φ) = 0.968), and the current increases to 7.5× full load:
ΔVstart = √3 × Istart × L × (r × cos(φstart) + x × sin(φstart)) / 1000 — (Eq. 6)
70 mm² at 973 A starting current (AS/NZS):
ΔVstart = 1.732 × 973 × 150 × (0.321 × 0.25 + 0.110 × 0.968) / 1000
ΔVstart = 252,801 × 0.186 / 1000
ΔVstart = 47.0 V = 11.3% (of 415 V)
Motor terminal voltage = 415 − 47.0 = 368 V
Starting torque retention (torque is proportional to V²):
Tstart / Trated = (368 / 415)² = 0.786 = 78.6% — (Eq. 7)
This is borderline. IEEE 141 (Red Book) recommends a minimum of 80% terminal voltage (64% starting torque) for reliable starting. At 78.6% torque, this motor may fail to accelerate the high-inertia fan load within acceptable time. For a steel mill environment with voltage fluctuations, this is unacceptable.
95 mm² at 1,010 A starting current (BS 7671 / IEC):
ΔVstart = 1.732 × 1,010 × 150 × (0.236 × 0.25 + 0.110 × 0.968) / 1000
ΔVstart = 262,414 × 0.165 / 1000
ΔVstart = 43.3 V = 10.8% (of 400 V)
Motor terminal voltage = 400 − 43.3 = 356.7 V. Starting torque retention = (356.7 / 400)² = 79.5%.
Still below 80% terminal voltage. The motor will likely start but with marginal torque and extended acceleration time. For a high-inertia fan in a steel mill, this is a design risk.
4/0 AWG / 107 mm² at 1,010 A starting current (NEC):
ΔVstart = 1.732 × 1,010 × 150 × (0.203 × 0.25 + 0.110 × 0.968) / 1000
ΔVstart = 262,414 × 0.157 / 1000
ΔVstart = 41.2 V = 10.3% (of 400 V)
Motor terminal voltage = 400 − 41.2 = 358.8 V. Starting torque retention = (358.8 / 400)² = 80.5%.
The NEC selection just barely passes the 80% terminal voltage threshold — by only 0.5%.
Step 7: Upsize for Starting Voltage Drop
All four selections need review. The motor starting voltage drop at 150 m pushes every selection to the boundary. The next cable size up for each standard:
AS/NZS 3008: Upsize from 70 mm² to 120 mm²
From Table 35, 120 mm²: r = 0.188 mΩ/m, x = 0.100 mΩ/m
ΔVstart = 1.732 × 973 × 150 × (0.188 × 0.25 + 0.100 × 0.968) / 1000
ΔVstart = 252,801 × 0.144 / 1000
ΔVstart = 36.4 V = 8.8%
Motor terminal voltage = 415 − 36.4 = 378.6 V. Torque retention = (378.6/415)² = 83.2%. PASS.
BS 7671 / IEC: Upsize from 95 mm² to 120 mm²
From Table 4E2B, 120 mm²: r = 0.188 mΩ/m, x = 0.100 mΩ/m
ΔVstart = 1.732 × 1,010 × 150 × (0.188 × 0.25 + 0.100 × 0.968) / 1000
ΔVstart = 262,414 × 0.144 / 1000
ΔVstart = 37.8 V = 9.4%
Motor terminal voltage = 400 − 37.8 = 362.2 V. Torque retention = (362.2/400)² = 82.0%. PASS.
NEC: Upsize from 4/0 AWG to 250 kcmil (127 mm²)
From NEC Table 9, 250 kcmil: r = 0.171 mΩ/m, x = 0.105 mΩ/m
ΔVstart = 1.732 × 1,010 × 150 × (0.171 × 0.25 + 0.105 × 0.968) / 1000
ΔVstart = 262,414 × 0.145 / 1000
ΔVstart = 38.1 V = 9.5%
Motor terminal voltage = 400 − 38.1 = 361.9 V. Torque retention = (361.9/400)² = 81.9%. PASS.
Step 8: Protection Device Selection
Motor branch circuit protection varies significantly across standards:
| Parameter | AS/NZS 3000 | BS 7671 | IEC 60364 | NEC 430 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overload relay class | Class 10A | Class 10 | Class 10 | NEC 430.32 (115% FLC) |
| MCCB frame rating | 200 A | 200 A | 200 A | 200 A |
| Thermal trip setting | 1.05 × IFL | 1.05 × IFL | 1.05 × IFL | 1.15 × IFL (NEC 430.32) |
| Instantaneous trip max | 8–10 × In | 10 × In | 10 × In | NEC 430.52: 250% for inverse-time |
| Short-circuit backup | HRC fuse 250 A | BS 88 fuse 250 A | gG fuse 250 A | Dual-element fuse 250 A |
NEC key difference (NEC 430.52): NEC explicitly limits motor branch circuit short-circuit and ground-fault protection to specific multiples of FLC — 250% for inverse-time breakers, 175% for dual-element fuses, 800% for instantaneous-trip breakers. This interacts with cable sizing because the protection device rating determines the minimum cable ampacity.
Result Summary
| Check | AS/NZS 3008 | BS 7671 | IEC 60364 | NEC |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full-load current | 129.8 A | 134.6 A | 134.6 A | 134.6 A |
| Starting current | 973 A | 1,010 A | 1,010 A | 1,010 A |
| Combined derating | 0.694 | 0.635 | 0.635 | 0.557 |
| Cable (current capacity) | 70 mm² | 95 mm² | 95 mm² | 4/0 AWG (107 mm²) |
| Running VD% | 2.70% PASS | 2.27% PASS | 2.27% PASS | 2.02% PASS |
| Starting VD% (initial) | 11.3% FAIL | 10.8% FAIL | 10.8% FAIL | 10.3% MARGINAL |
| Final cable (after VD) | 120 mm² | 120 mm² | 120 mm² | 250 kcmil (127 mm²) |
| Starting VD% (final) | 8.8% | 9.4% | 9.4% | 9.5% |
| Starting torque retained | 83.2% | 82.0% | 82.0% | 81.9% |
| Status | PASS | PASS | PASS | PASS |
Multi-Standard Comparison
| Parameter | AS/NZS 3008 | BS 7671 | IEC 60364 | NEC |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominal voltage | 415 V | 400 V | 400 V | 400 V |
| Reference ambient | 40°C | 30°C | 30°C | 30°C |
| Temp derating at 45°C | 0.95 (mild penalty) | 0.87 (significant penalty) | 0.87 | 0.87 |
| Grouping derating (6 ccts) | 0.73 | 0.73 | 0.73 | 0.80 (tray more generous) |
| Continuous load factor | Not explicit | Not explicit | Not explicit | 1.25 (NEC 430.22) |
| Cable for current capacity | 70 mm² | 95 mm² | 95 mm² | 107 mm² |
| Cable after starting VD | 120 mm² | 120 mm² | 120 mm² | 127 mm² |
| Governing factor | Starting VD | Starting VD | Starting VD | Starting VD |
| Copper weight (150 m) | 160 kg | 160 kg | 160 kg | 170 kg |
Key Insight
The key finding in this example is that motor starting voltage drop — not steady-state current capacity — governs cable selection for all four standards when the route exceeds approximately 100 m for a 75 kW DOL motor. The cable sizes selected purely on current capacity (70 mm² to 107 mm²) all had to be upsized to 120–127 mm² once starting voltage drop was checked.
What makes this counterintuitive is the convergence: despite AS/NZS starting with a 70 mm² cable and NEC starting with 107 mm² (a 53% difference in copper), the final cable selections after voltage drop analysis are nearly identical at 120–127 mm². The standards diverge on current capacity but converge on starting voltage drop because the physics of impedance at 150 m are independent of the administrative differences between standards.
This has profound cost implications: an engineer who sizes a motor feeder cable only for steady-state current capacity under AS/NZS 3008 would specify 70 mm², using only 58% of the copper actually required. The motor would either fail to start, take dangerously long to accelerate, or draw excessive starting current from a reduced-voltage terminal — any of which can cause protection trips, voltage sags affecting other equipment, or motor winding damage from extended locked-rotor conditions.
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