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BS 7671 Amendment 4: Cable Sizing for Battery Circuits

Amendment 4Cable Sizing ImpactBattery Circuits

Battery circuits present unique cable sizing challenges that are now formally addressed in Chapter 57 of Amendment 4. Unlike conventional AC load circuits where current flows in one direction from source to load, battery circuits carry bidirectional current — charging from the grid and discharging to the installation. Chapter 57 requires that cable sizing accounts for this bidirectional operation.

The design current for a battery circuit is the higher of the maximum charge current and the maximum discharge current. For most lithium-ion systems, these are equal (the battery charges and discharges at the same maximum rate), but some systems — particularly those with rapid charge capability — may have asymmetric ratings. Chapter 57 requires the cable to be sized for the larger of the two currents at the continuous rating, with no diversity applied.

DC cable selection for battery circuits requires specific attention. Battery systems typically operate at voltages between 48V (small domestic) and 800V (commercial/industrial). The cable insulation rating must exceed the maximum battery voltage under all conditions, including the equalising charge voltage for lead-acid systems (approximately 15% above nominal) and the maximum string voltage for lithium-ion systems at full state of charge.

DC cables for battery circuits must be selected from those rated for DC operation. Not all cables rated for AC use are suitable for DC, because DC arcs are harder to extinguish than AC arcs (no zero-crossing). Chapter 57 specifies that cables on DC battery circuits must have an insulation rating certified for DC operation at the system voltage, and that DC isolators and switchgear must be rated for the DC prospective fault current.

Parallel cable matching receives specific requirements in Chapter 57. For high-current battery circuits where parallel cables are used, the cables must be matched in length (within 2% tolerance), cross-section (identical), and routing (same containment path). Chapter 57 specifies a maximum impedance mismatch of 5% between parallel paths, verified by measurement during commissioning. Unmatched parallel cables can lead to unequal current sharing, with one cable carrying significantly more than its rated current.

Short-circuit withstand for battery cables must account for the battery's fault current contribution. Lithium-ion batteries can deliver very high prospective fault currents — a 100 kWh commercial BESS at 400V might deliver 25 kA or more. The cable's I²t withstand must exceed the let-through energy of the protective device at the battery's prospective fault current.

ECalPro's Cable Size Calculator handles Chapter 57 battery circuit sizing including bidirectional current assessment, DC voltage rating verification, parallel cable matching, and short-circuit withstand calculations.

What Changed

AspectBefore Amendment 4After Amendment 4
Bidirectional currentCable sized for load current in one directionChapter 57 requires sizing for higher of charge and discharge current; no diversity permitted
DC cable ratingAC-rated cables commonly used for DC battery circuitsCables must be specifically rated for DC operation at system voltage; DC arc characteristics differ from AC
Parallel cable toleranceGood practice guidance onlyMaximum 5% impedance mismatch; length matched within 2%; verified by measurement at commissioning

Compliance Steps

  1. 1
    Determine design current as higher of maximum charge and discharge current — no diversity factor
  2. 2
    Select cables with DC-rated insulation exceeding maximum battery voltage under all conditions
  3. 3
    For parallel cables, match length within 2% and verify impedance mismatch under 5% at commissioning
  4. 4
    Calculate short-circuit withstand against battery prospective fault current contribution
  5. 5
    Verify complete cable sizing using ECalPro Cable Size Calculator with Chapter 57 requirements

Calculate with Amendment 4 Requirements

ECalPro's calculators are updated for BS 7671 Amendment 4. Verify your battery circuits designs against the latest requirements.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Only if the cable insulation has a certified DC voltage rating at or above the maximum battery voltage. DC arcs are harder to extinguish than AC, so not all AC-rated cables are suitable for DC service.

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