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Worked Example: Voltage Drop Calculation for a 2 km Industrial Feeder — The 2003 Northeast Blackout

Complete voltage drop calculation for a 2 km 415 V industrial feeder. Shows why the simplified mV/A/m method fails at this distance, how reactive impedance dominates, and the cascading failure mechanism that blacked out 55 million people.

BS 767118 min readUpdated February 24, 2026
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The Incident: When Voltage Drop Cascades into Catastrophe

On 14 August 2003, a software bug in the alarm system at FirstEnergy’s control room in Ohio meant operators didn’t notice that overloaded 345 kV transmission lines were sagging into trees. Within 90 minutes, the cascading failure blacked out 55 million people across the northeastern United States and Canada for up to four days. Eleven people died. The estimated economic cost exceeded US$6 billion.

While the Northeast Blackout was a transmission-level event, the underlying physics are identical to what happens on your 415 V industrial feeder. When voltage drops too far, induction motors slow down, torque drops, and the motor draws more current to compensate. More current causes more voltage drop. More voltage drop causes more current. This positive feedback loop — voltage collapse — is the same mechanism whether the system is 345 kV or 415 V.

On a 2 km 415 V industrial feeder, this cascade can develop in minutes. And it starts with a calculation error that nearly every junior engineer makes: using the simplified resistance-only voltage drop formula on a cable where reactance dominates.

Scenario: 200 kW Motor Load on a 500 m Industrial Feeder

Calculate the voltage drop for a motor-driven compressor located 500 m from the main switchboard in an industrial facility. We will demonstrate both the simplified method and the full impedance method to reveal the dangerous discrepancy.

ParameterValue
Supply415 V three-phase, 50 Hz
Load200 kW compressor motor, PF 0.80, efficiency 0.93
Cable route length500 m
Installation methodMulticore cable in ground (direct buried), Method D
Soil temperature25°C
Soil thermal resistivity1.5 K·m/W
Cable typeXLPE insulated, copper conductor, 90°C rated
Primary standardBS 7671:2018+A2
Why 500 m, not 2 km? The original 2 km scenario at 415 V produces voltage drops exceeding 30% — utterly impractical. This demonstrates why 415 V distribution over 2 km requires either a step-up to medium voltage (3.3 kV or 11 kV) or intermediate substations. We use 500 m here as a realistic maximum for 415 V distribution, which still clearly demonstrates the reactance problem.

Step 1: Calculate Load Current

For a three-phase motor load:

Ib = P / (√3 × V × PF × η) — (Eq. 1)

Ib = 200,000 / (√3 × 415 × 0.80 × 0.93)

Ib = 200,000 / 534.7

Ib = 374 A

Step 2: Select Cable for Current Capacity

Protective device: 400 A MCCB (next standard rating above 374 A).

Derating for buried installation at 25°C soil, 1.5 K·m/W thermal resistivity. From BS 7671, Table 4B3 (soil temperature correction) and Table 4B4 (thermal resistivity):

Csoil-temp = 1.04 (25°C vs 20°C reference)

Cthermal = 0.89 (1.5 K·m/W vs 1.0 K·m/W reference)

Ctotal = 1.04 × 0.89 = 0.926

Required tabulated current rating:

It ≥ 400 / 0.926 = 432 A — (Eq. 2)

From BS 7671, Table 4D4A (Method D, XLPE copper):

Cable Size (mm²)Rating (A)Result
150373✗ Too low
185424✗ Too low (424 < 432)
240497✓ Passes

Selected: 240 mm² XLPE copper cable. Now we verify voltage drop — and this is where the problem emerges.

Step 3: Voltage Drop — Simplified Method (Resistance Only)

Many engineers use the simplified mV/A/m method from BS 7671 Appendix 12, Table 4E4B. For 240 mm² three-phase XLPE copper cable:

mV/A/m (resistive component, r) = 0.180

The simplified voltage drop (resistance only):

ΔVsimple = mV/A/m × Ib × L / 1000 — (Eq. 3)

ΔVsimple = 0.180 × 374 × 500 / 1000

ΔVsimple = 33.7 V

ΔVsimple% = 33.7 / 415 × 100 = 8.11%

This exceeds the BS 7671 Appendix 12 limit of 5% for power circuits. An engineer using only the simplified method would upsize to 300 mm² and recheck:

ΔV = 0.145 × 374 × 500 / 1000 = 27.1 V = 6.53% — still fails!

They might then try 400 mm²:

ΔV = 0.113 × 374 × 500 / 1000 = 21.1 V = 5.09% — marginal pass.

But wait — this simplified method is wrong for this scenario. Let’s see why.

Step 4: Voltage Drop — Full Impedance Method (The Correct Answer)

For cables above 50 mm² and runs over 100 m, BS 7671, Appendix 12, Note 7 states that the full impedance method should be used when the power factor is less than 1.0. The formula separates resistive and reactive components:

ΔV = √3 × Ib × L × (r cosφ + x sinφ) / 1000 — (Eq. 4)

From BS 7671 Table 4E4B for 240 mm² XLPE three-phase copper cable:

ComponentmV/A/mDescription
r (resistive)0.180Voltage drop due to resistance
x (reactive)0.140Voltage drop due to reactance
z (total impedance)0.228Combined (at unity PF)

At power factor 0.80 (cosφ = 0.80, sinφ = 0.60):

ΔV = √3 × 374 × 500 × (0.180 × 0.80 + 0.140 × 0.60) / 1000 — (Eq. 5)

ΔV = 323,826 × (0.144 + 0.084) / 1000

ΔV = 323,826 × 0.228 / 1000

ΔV = 73.8 V

ΔV% = 73.8 / 415 × 100 = 17.8%

Wait — this is HIGHER, not lower? Yes. For large cables at low power factor, the full impedance method gives a larger voltage drop than the resistance-only method, not smaller. The reactive component (x sinφ = 0.084 mV/A/m) adds 47% more voltage drop on top of the resistive component (r cosφ = 0.144 mV/A/m). The simplified method using only the resistive mV/A/m value UNDERESTIMATES the true voltage drop when power factor is below 1.0 and cable reactance is significant.

Step 5: Understanding the Discrepancy

Let’s break down why the simplified method fails at large cable sizes and long distances:

Cable Size (mm²)r (mΩ/m)x (mΩ/m)x/r RatioError at PF 0.8
411.00.1100.01< 1% (negligible)
162.80.1100.042%
500.930.1200.137%
1200.380.1300.3418%
1850.240.1350.5629%
2400.1800.1400.7837%
4000.1130.1451.2853%

The pattern is clear: as cable cross-section increases, resistance drops but reactance stays roughly constant (it’s a geometric property, determined by conductor spacing, not conductor size). Above 240 mm², reactance actually exceeds resistance, and the simplified resistance-only method becomes dangerously inaccurate.

Rule of thumb: For cable sizes ≥ 70 mm² at runs ≥ 100 m with PF < 0.9, ALWAYS use the full impedance method.

Step 6: Engineering Solutions

With 17.8% voltage drop at 500 m, 415 V distribution is impractical for this load at this distance. Here are the engineering solutions, in order of preference:

Option A: Step up to medium voltage (recommended)

Use an 11 kV/415 V transformer at the load end. At 11 kV, the same 200 kW load draws only 13.1 A. Voltage drop for 50 mm² 11 kV cable over 500 m:

ΔV = √3 × 13.1 × 500 × (0.93 × 0.8 + 0.11 × 0.6) / 1000 = 9.6 V = 0.09%

Option B: Power factor correction at the motor

Installing capacitors at the motor to raise PF from 0.80 to 0.95 reduces voltage drop by eliminating the reactive component:

ΔV = 323,826 × (0.180 × 0.95 + 0.140 × 0.312) / 1000 = 323,826 × 0.215 / 1000 = 69.5 V = 16.7%

Still inadequate — PFC alone doesn’t solve a 500 m 415 V feeder problem.

Option C: Maximum cable length calculation

For the 240 mm² cable at 374 A and PF 0.80, the maximum cable length to stay within 5% voltage drop:

Lmax = ΔVmax × 1000 / (√3 × Ib × (r cosφ + x sinφ)) — (Eq. 6)

Lmax = 20.75 × 1000 / (1.732 × 374 × 0.228)

Lmax = 20,750 / 147.7

Lmax = 140 m

At 415 V, this 200 kW load can only be located a maximum of 140 metres from the switchboard. Beyond that, medium voltage distribution is required.

Result Summary

MethodVoltage DropError vs Full MethodStatus vs 5% Limit
Simplified (r only, 240 mm²)33.7 V (8.11%)−54% (underestimates)✗ FAIL
Full impedance (r cosφ + x sinφ, 240 mm²)73.8 V (17.8%)Correct✗ FAIL
Full impedance, 400 mm²52.2 V (12.6%)Correct✗ FAIL
11 kV MV feeder + 50 mm²9.6 V (0.09%)Correct✓ PASS

Result: 415 V distribution is impractical at 500 m for a 200 kW load. The maximum feasible distance is approximately 140 m. Medium voltage (11 kV) distribution with a local step-down transformer is the correct engineering solution.

The key lesson: the simplified mV/A/m method underestimated the voltage drop by 54% in this scenario. An engineer relying on the simplified method would select a cable that appears compliant on paper but causes motor overheating, tripping, and potential cascade failures in practice — the same physics that cascaded across the northeast US grid in 2003.

What Would Have Prevented This?

The 2003 Northeast Blackout resulted from software bugs and operator complacency, not cable sizing errors. But the voltage collapse mechanism is universal:

  • Always use the full impedance method for cables ≥ 70 mm² with PF < 0.9 — the simplified method is only valid for small cables on short runs at near-unity power factor
  • Know your maximum distance — calculate the maximum permissible cable length for each cable size and load combination, and flag circuits that approach this limit
  • Design for voltage regulation, not just voltage drop — consider how voltage varies from no-load to full-load, and ensure motors receive adequate voltage under all operating conditions
  • Consider medium voltage for runs over 200 m at loads above 50 kW — the cost of a local transformer is often less than the cost of oversized LV cables
  • Install under-voltage protection on critical motor circuits — this prevents the cascade where low voltage causes high current causes lower voltage

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Frequently Asked Questions

Use the full impedance method (r cosφ + x sinφ) whenever: the cable cross-section is 70 mm² or larger, the cable run exceeds 100 m, or the power factor is below 0.9. As a conservative rule, always use the full method for any industrial installation. The simplified resistance-only method is adequate only for small domestic cables (up to 16 mm²) on short runs with resistive loads.
Cable resistance is inversely proportional to cross-sectional area — double the area, halve the resistance. But cable reactance (inductive component) is determined by the physical spacing between conductors, which changes very little as cables get larger. The result: as cable cross-section increases, resistance drops rapidly but reactance stays nearly constant. Above approximately 240 mm², reactance exceeds resistance and becomes the dominant contributor to voltage drop.
There is no single answer — it depends on load current, cable size, power factor, and allowable voltage drop. As a rough guide: for a 100 A load with 185 mm² cable at PF 0.8, the maximum distance for 5% voltage drop is approximately 280 m. For a 400 A load with 240 mm² cable, it drops to about 140 m. Any circuit where the voltage drop calculation exceeds 5% should be redesigned using medium voltage distribution with a local transformer.

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