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Cable Sizing Calculator per AS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017 for Industrial Installations

AS/NZS 3008.1.1:20172017Industrial Installations

Cable sizing for AS/NZS 3008 industrial installations addresses high-current motor feeders, process plant ambient temperatures up to 80 °C requiring Table 14 derating, short circuit withstand per Clause 3.7 and Table 34, and multi-circuit cable tray runs where Table 13 grouping factors significantly reduce current-carrying capacity for bundled power and control cables.

Quick Reference Table

AS/NZS 3008 Industrial Cable Sizing ReferencesAS/NZS 3008.1.1:2017 (2017)
ParameterValue / RequirementClause Reference
Motor cable sizingFull-load current rating from motor nameplateAS/NZS 3000, Clause 4.7
High ambient deratingCorrection for air temps 45-80 °C in process plantsTable 14
Cable tray groupingMulti-layer derating for industrial tray runsTable 13
Short circuit withstandk²S² ≥ I²t adiabatic equation for copper/aluminiumClause 3.7, Table 34
Buried cable in ductsCurrent ratings for cables in underground ductsTable 3, Columns 17-19
Voltage drop for long feedersmV/A/m values for three-phase industrial circuitsTable 25

How to Calculate Cable Sizing for Industrial Installations

  1. 1

    Determine the motor or process load current

    Obtain the full-load current from the motor nameplate or drive specification. For DOL-started motors, account for starting currents of 6-8 times FLC when selecting protective devices.

  2. 2

    Assess the ambient environment

    Measure or estimate the maximum ambient temperature in the cable route. Process plants, boiler houses, and smelters may have sustained temperatures of 50-80 °C requiring severe Table 14 derating.

  3. 3

    Apply all derating factors

    Combine Table 14 (temperature), Table 13 (grouping), and Table 22 (buried sections) factors. In industrial settings, the combined derating can reduce effective cable capacity by 40-60%.

  4. 4

    Select cable size from Table 3

    Choose the conductor cross-section where derated capacity exceeds the design current. For industrial feeders, X-90 (XLPE 90 °C) insulation is preferred for its superior temperature and short circuit performance.

  5. 5

    Verify short circuit withstand

    Use Clause 3.7 and Table 34 (k factors) to verify the cable can withstand the prospective fault current at the switchboard for the upstream protective device clearing time.

  6. 6

    Check voltage drop under running and starting

    Calculate steady-state voltage drop per Table 25 and verify motor starting voltage dip remains acceptable — typically above 80% of nominal at motor terminals.

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BS 7671 vs AS/NZS 3008 Cable Sizing Comparison

ParameterBS 7671AS/NZS 3008
RegionUnited KingdomAustralia & New Zealand
Voltage drop limit3% lighting / 5% other5% general (AS/NZS 3000 Table C7)
Reference ambient temp30°C air40°C air (Table 22)
Ampacity tablesAppendix 4 Tables 4D1A–4J4ATables 13–20 (by method)
Derating tablesCa, Cg, Ci, Cc factorsTables 22, 24, 25, 26 factors
Soil temp reference20°C25°C (Table 25)

Frequently Asked Questions

The key differences are the base ambient temperature (40 °C for AS/NZS vs 30 °C for BS 7671), different table structures (AS/NZS uses a single Table 3 with 21 columns vs multiple tables in BS 7671), and AS/NZS 3008 includes specific provisions for Australian soil conditions in Table 22 that have no direct BS 7671 equivalent.
Table 34 provides k factors: 226 for copper with PVC insulation (75 °C), 143 for copper with XLPE (90 °C), and 148 for aluminium with PVC. These factors are used in the adiabatic equation S = sqrt(I²t) / k to determine minimum conductor cross-section for fault withstand.
Yes, aluminium is widely used for industrial sub-mains above 16 mm². Table 3 provides separate current ratings for aluminium conductors. The minimum recommended size for aluminium in industrial applications is 16 mm² to avoid connection reliability issues at smaller cross-sections.

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