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BS 7671 Table 4D1A: Single-Core PVC Current Ratings

BS 7671 Table 4D1A explained — current-carrying capacity of single-core 70°C thermoplastic (PVC) cables by installation method. Includes reference table and worked examples.

BS 767110 min readUpdated March 19, 2026
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What Is BS 7671 Table 4D1A?

Table 4D1A in BS 7671:2018+A2 provides the current-carrying capacity (in amperes) of single-core 70°C thermoplastic (PVC) insulated and sheathed cables with or without armour. It is one of the most frequently referenced tables in BS 7671 Appendix 4.

The table covers copper and aluminium conductors across all standard installation methods defined in Table 4A2 — from enclosed in conduit in an insulated wall (Method A1) through to spaced in free air (Method G). Each installation method has its own column, reflecting the different heat dissipation characteristics of each arrangement.

The table is used in the second step of cable sizing: after determining the design current and identifying the installation method, the engineer looks up the minimum cable cross-sectional area whose tabulated current rating equals or exceeds the required design current (after applying all applicable derating factors).

Table Structure and Column Layout

Table 4D1A is organised with cable sizes in rows (from 1 mm² to 630 mm²) and installation methods in columns. The main column groups are:

Column GroupInstallation MethodDescription
Column 1A1Single-core in conduit in thermally insulated wall
Column 2A2Single-core in conduit in thermally insulated wall (alternative)
Column 3B1Single-core in conduit on a wall / in trunking
Column 4B2Single-core in conduit on a wall (alternative)
Column 5CSingle-core clipped direct to a surface
Columns 6–7E, FSingle-core on perforated tray (touching / trefoil)
Column 8GSingle-core spaced in free air
Naming convention: The “4” prefix = Appendix 4. “D” = current-carrying capacity section. “1” = single-core cables. “A” = PVC/thermoplastic insulation. So 4D1A = Appendix 4, current rating, single-core, PVC.

Reference Current Ratings (Copper, Selected Methods)

The following table shows commonly referenced current ratings for copper conductors in single-core 70°C PVC cables at the BS 7671 reference conditions (30°C ambient, single circuit, no thermal insulation contact):

Size (mm²)Method A1 (A)Method B1 (A)Method C (A)Method E (A)Method G (A)
1.514.517.519.52224
2.52024273033
42632364045
63441465157
104657637076
1661768594101
2580101112119131
3599125138148162
50119151168180196
70151192213232251
95182232258282304
120210269299328352
150240300344379406
185273341392434463
240320400461514546
300367458530593629

Key observation: A 10 mm² cable rated at 46 A in Method A1 (conduit in insulated wall) achieves 76 A in Method G (spaced free air) — a 65% increase simply by changing the installation arrangement. This illustrates why correct installation method selection is critical.

How to Use Table 4D1A — Step by Step

Follow this procedure to select a cable size using Table 4D1A:

  1. Calculate the design current (Ib): Determine the expected load current of the circuit.
  2. Select protective device rating (In): Choose the next standard overcurrent device rating ≥ Ib.
  3. Identify installation method: Use Table 4A2 to determine the method code (A1, B1, C, E, etc.).
  4. Calculate derating factors: Multiply all applicable factors — Ca (ambient temp from Table 4B1), Cg (grouping from Tables 4C1–4C5), Ci (thermal insulation), Cc (protective device type).
  5. Calculate required tabulated current: It = In / (Ca × Cg × Ci × Cc).
  6. Look up Table 4D1A: Find the column for your installation method and the smallest cable size whose rating ≥ It.
  7. Verify voltage drop: Check the selected cable using Tables 4E1A–4E4A against the limits in Table 4Ab.
Worked example:
  Design current (Ib) = 28 A
  Protective device (In) = 32 A (BS 88 fuse)
  Installation: Method B1 (conduit on wall)
  Ambient temperature: 35°C → Ca = 0.94 (Table 4B1)
  Grouping: 3 circuits → Cg = 0.70 (Table 4C1)

  Required It = 32 / (0.94 × 0.70) = 32 / 0.658 = 48.6 A

  Table 4D1A, Method B1 column:
    6 mm² = 41 A  (too low)
    10 mm² = 57 A  (48.6 ≤ 57 √)

  Selected cable: 10 mm² single-core PVC copper

Common Mistakes When Using Table 4D1A

Avoid these frequent errors when working with BS 7671 current rating tables:

  • Wrong installation method: Using Method C (clipped direct) ratings for cables installed in conduit (Method B1) overstates the current rating and creates an undersized cable.
  • Forgetting grouping factors: When multiple circuits share the same conduit or tray, the grouping factor from Tables 4C1–4C5 must always be applied. This is the most commonly overlooked derating factor.
  • Mixing single-core and multicore tables: Table 4D1A is for single-core cables only. For multicore cables, use Table 4D2A. Using the wrong table can overstate ratings by 10–20%.
  • Ignoring the PVC vs XLPE distinction: PVC (70°C) has lower ratings than XLPE (90°C). Table 4D1A is for PVC only — for XLPE single-core, use Table 4D3A.
  • Not checking voltage drop: A cable that passes the current rating check may still fail on voltage drop. Always verify using Tables 4E1A–4E4A after selecting the cable size.

Table 4D1A vs Other BS 7671 Current Rating Tables

BS 7671 Appendix 4 contains five main current rating table groups. Choose the correct one based on the cable construction:

TableCable TypeMax Conductor Temp
4D1ASingle-core PVC/thermoplastic70°C
4D2AMulticore PVC/thermoplastic70°C
4D3ASingle-core XLPE/thermosetting90°C
4D4AMulticore XLPE/thermosetting90°C
4D5AMineral insulated (MICC)70°C or 105°C

For the same cable size and installation method, XLPE cables (Tables 4D3A/4D4A) typically carry 20–30% more current than PVC cables (Tables 4D1A/4D2A) because of their higher operating temperature. This makes XLPE the preferred choice where higher current capacity is needed without increasing cable size.

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Frequently Asked Questions

The current rating of a 2.5 mm² single-core 70°C PVC copper cable depends on the installation method. From Table 4D1A: Method A1 (conduit in insulated wall) = 20 A, Method B1 (conduit on wall) = 24 A, Method C (clipped direct) = 27 A, and Method E (perforated tray) = 30 A. These are base ratings at 30°C ambient — derating factors must be applied for higher temperatures, grouping, or thermal insulation contact.
Table 4D1A is exclusively for single-core cables. For multicore cables (twin-and-earth, 3-core, 4-core), use Table 4D2A instead. The distinction matters because multicore cables have additional mutual heating between conductors within the same sheath, resulting in lower current ratings than equivalent single-core cables.
Table 4D1A ratings are based on a reference ambient air temperature of 30°C, which is the BS 7671 standard reference condition. If the actual ambient temperature differs from 30°C, apply the correction factor from Table 4B1. For buried cables, the reference ground temperature is 20°C and correction factors come from Table 4B2.

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