Worked Example: Residential Cable Sizing — Multi-Standard
Step-by-step worked example sizing a cable for a residential cooker circuit. Includes full derating factor calculations, voltage drop verification, protective device coordination, and a multi-standard comparison across AS/NZS 3008, BS 7671, and IEC 60364.
Scenario
Size a cable for a single-phase electric cooker in a residential kitchen. The full installation details are:
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Supply | 230 V single-phase, 50 Hz |
| Load | 7.2 kW, power factor 1.0 (resistive) |
| Cable route length | 22 m (from consumer unit to kitchen) |
| Installation method | Enclosed in wiring enclosure in thermally insulated wall |
| Ambient temperature | 35°C |
| Grouping | 2 circuits in the same conduit |
| Cable type | V-90 (PVC 90°C) thermoplastic TPS, copper conductor |
| Primary standard | AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017 |
This example walks through the complete cable sizing procedure step by step, with full standard references at each stage, then compares the result across three international standards.
Step 1: Calculate Design Current (I_b)
For a single-phase resistive load:
Ib = P / (V × PF) — (Eq. 1)
Ib = 7,200 / (230 × 1.0)
Ib = 31.3 A
The design current is the maximum sustained current the circuit is expected to carry. For a resistive load like a cooker, the power factor is 1.0, simplifying the calculation.
Step 2: Select Protective Device (I_n)
The protective device must have a rated current not less than the design current:
In ≥ Ib — (Eq. 2)
From the standard protective device ratings (6, 10, 16, 20, 25, 32, 40, 50, 63 A...), the next rating above 31.3 A is:
In = 32 A (MCB, Type B or C)
A Type B MCB trips at 3–5× rated current (instantaneous magnetic trip). Type C (5–10×) could also be used but Type B is more common for resistive loads in domestic installations.
Step 3: Determine Derating Factors
The installation conditions differ from the standard reference conditions. We need to apply derating factors from AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017:
Ambient temperature derating (k1):
Reference ambient for AS/NZS 3008 is 40°C. Our ambient is 35°C, which is below the reference, so the temperature factor is actually greater than 1.0.
From Table 22, Row: 35°C, Column: 90°C rated cable:
k1 = 1.04 (slight increase because ambient is below 40°C reference)
Grouping derating (k2):
From Table 25, Row: 2 circuits, enclosed in conduit:
k2 = 0.80
Combined derating factor:
ktotal = k1 × k2 = 1.04 × 0.80 = 0.832
Step 4: Calculate Required Current Rating and Select Cable
The cable must have a current-carrying capacity (after derating) at least equal to the protective device rating:
Iz ≥ In / ktotal — (Eq. 3)
Iz ≥ 32 / 0.832
Iz ≥ 38.5 A
Now select from AS/NZS 3008 Table 13 (multicore cables), Column 6 (enclosed in wiring enclosure, V-90 insulation, copper conductor):
| Cable Size (mm²) | Current Rating (A) | Result |
|---|---|---|
| 4 | 31 | ✗ Too low (31 < 38.5) |
| 6 | 40 | ✓ Passes (40 ≥ 38.5) |
| 10 | 54 | ✓ Passes with margin |
The minimum cable size based on current-carrying capacity is 6 mm², rated at 40 A from Table 13, Column 6.
However, we should verify that 6 mm² passes the voltage drop check before finalising this selection.
Step 5: Voltage Drop Verification
Check voltage drop for the 6 mm² cable first. From AS/NZS 3008 Table 35, for 6 mm² V-90 single-phase copper cable:
mV/A·m = 7.3 (at unity power factor)
ΔV = mV/A·m × Ib × L / 1000 — (Eq. 4)
ΔV = 7.3 × 31.3 × 22 / 1000
ΔV = 5.03 V
ΔV% = 5.03 / 230 × 100 = 2.19%
The AS/NZS 3000 Clause 3.6.2 limit for power circuits is 5%. This circuit at 2.19% passes comfortably.
Now let’s also check the 10 mm² option for comparison:
mV/A·m = 4.0 (Table 35, 10 mm²)
ΔV = 4.0 × 31.3 × 22 / 1000 = 2.75 V = 1.20%
Both 6 mm² and 10 mm² pass the voltage drop check. Since 6 mm² is the smaller and cheaper option and passes all checks, it is the correct selection for this scenario.
Step 6: Short Circuit Check
For completeness, verify the cable can withstand the prospective short circuit current at the consumer unit. Using the adiabatic equation:
k²S² ≥ I²t — (Eq. 5)
Where k = 115 (PVC insulated copper, initial temperature 90°C, final 250°C per AS/NZS 3008 Table 52), S = 6 mm², and I²t is determined by the protective device clearing time and fault current.
k²S² = 115² × 6² = 13,225 × 36 = 476,100 A²s
For a typical domestic installation with 16 kA prospective fault current and a 32 A Type B MCB tripping in approximately 5 ms at fault level, the energy let-through is well within the cable’s withstand. The 6 mm² cable passes the short circuit check.
Result Summary
| Check | Requirement | Actual | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Current capacity | ≥ 38.5 A (derated) | 40 A (6 mm², Table 13 Col 6) | ✓ PASS |
| Voltage drop | ≤ 5.0% | 2.19% | ✓ PASS |
| Short circuit | k²S² ≥ I²t | 476,100 A²s > device let-through | ✓ PASS |
Selected cable: 6 mm² V-90 TPS copper, protected by 32 A Type B MCB.
The governing factor is current-carrying capacity. The grouping derating (2 circuits) reduced the effective cable capacity enough that 4 mm² was insufficient, requiring a 6 mm² cable. Voltage drop was not the governing factor for this relatively short 22 m run.
Multi-Standard Comparison
Calculating the same circuit under different standards reveals how reference conditions and table values affect cable selection. Here is how this cooker circuit sizes across three standards:
| Parameter | AS/NZS 3008 | BS 7671 | IEC 60364 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Design current | 31.3 A | 31.3 A | 31.3 A |
| Protective device | 32 A MCB | 32 A MCB | 32 A MCB |
| Reference ambient | 40°C | 30°C | 30°C |
| Temp derating at 35°C | 1.04 (bonus) | 0.94 (penalty) | 0.94 (penalty) |
| Grouping derating (2 ccts) | 0.80 | 0.80 | 0.80 |
| Combined derating | 0.832 | 0.752 | 0.752 |
| Required Iz | 38.5 A | 42.6 A | 42.6 A |
| Selected cable size | 6 mm² | 10 mm² | 10 mm² |
| Voltage drop | 2.19% | 1.25% | 1.25% |
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Related Resources
Cable Sizing Methodology
The complete engineering methodology used in this worked example.
Read moreAS/NZS 3008 Reference
Reference guide for AS/NZS 3008 tables used in the primary calculation.
Read moreDerating Factors Explained
Comprehensive guide to the derating factors applied in this example.
Read moreAS/NZS 3008 vs BS 7671 Comparison
Understand why the multi-standard comparison in this example produces different cable sizes.
Read moreCable Sizing: 50m Office Feeder — 4 Standards Compared
Same scenario calculated under AS/NZS, BS 7671, IEC, and NEC.
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