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Voltage Drop Calculator per BS 7671 for Industrial Installations

BS 767118th Edition + Amendment 2:2022Industrial Installations

Industrial voltage drop calculations under BS 7671 are governed by Regulation 525.1, with a maximum of 5% for power circuits per Appendix 4, Table 4Ab. Long cable runs to remote plant equipment, high motor starting currents, and cable tray installations with grouping derating factors make industrial voltage drop assessment critical for plant reliability.

Quick Reference Table

BS 7671 Voltage Drop Data — IndustrialBS 7671 (18th Edition + Amendment 2:2022)
ParameterValue / RequirementClause Reference
Power circuit limit5% (20 V at 400 V three-phase)Appendix 4, Table 4Ab
Copper SWA mV/A/m valuesTabulated for armoured cablesTable 4D4B
Aluminium conductor mV/A/mHigher values per CSA than copper equivalentsTable 4H4B
Permissible limitsMeasured at terminals of current-using equipmentRegulation 525.1
Motor starting exclusionTransient voltage dip during starting not subject to steady-state limitsRegulation 525.1 Note

How to Calculate Voltage Drop for Industrial Installations

  1. 1

    Identify the heaviest motor load and cable route

    In industrial installations, the worst-case voltage drop is usually the longest cable run feeding the largest motor. Measure the route length along cable trays, through risers, and across the plant to the motor control centre or direct-on-line starter.

  2. 2

    Determine full-load current and starting current

    Use the motor nameplate full-load current (FLC) for steady-state voltage drop. Note the starting current (typically 6-8× FLC for DOL) — while BS 7671 excludes starting transients from the 5% limit, excessive starting voltage dip can cause nuisance tripping of contactors.

  3. 3

    Select cable type and find mV/A/m value

    For industrial installations, steel-wire armoured (SWA) cable is standard. Look up Table 4D4B for copper SWA or Table 4H4B for aluminium SWA. Use the three-phase column for three-phase motor circuits.

  4. 4

    Calculate steady-state voltage drop

    Apply VD = (mV/A/m × Ib × L) / 1000 using the motor full-load current. For a 400 V three-phase supply, the 5% limit gives 20 V maximum. Include the sub-main contribution if the MCC is remote from the main switchboard.

  5. 5

    Check motor starting voltage dip

    While not a BS 7671 compliance issue, calculate the voltage at motor terminals during starting: V_start = V_supply − (mV/A/m × I_start × L / 1000). Motors typically need at least 80% of nominal voltage to develop adequate starting torque.

  6. 6

    Verify and document

    Confirm the total steady-state voltage drop is within 5% per Table 4Ab. Record the calculation with cable reference, route length, and mV/A/m value used. For critical process motors, apply a safety margin of 1-2%.

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BS 7671 vs IEC 60364 Cable Sizing Comparison

ParameterBS 7671IEC 60364
ScopeUK & derivativesInternational (adopted by 60+ countries)
Voltage drop limit3% lighting / 5% other4% lighting / 5% other (typical)
Reference ambient temp30°C (air), 20°C (ground)30°C (air), 20°C (ground)
Installation methodsReference Methods A-G (Appendix 4)Reference Methods A-G (Table B.52.1)
Grouping factorsTable C.3 (BS specific)Table B.52.17 (international)
Disconnection time (230V)0.4s final / 5s distribution0.4s final / 5s distribution

Frequently Asked Questions

Industrial motor circuits are classified as power circuits, so the 5% limit from Table 4Ab applies. At 400 V three-phase, this is 20 V maximum at the motor terminals under full-load conditions. The voltage dip during motor starting is explicitly excluded from this limit by the note to Regulation 525.1, but designers should still verify that the starting voltage is adequate for the motor to accelerate the load.
Aluminium SWA cables have higher mV/A/m values than copper (approximately 1.6× for the same CSA), meaning you need a larger aluminium conductor to achieve the same voltage drop. However, aluminium is significantly cheaper per metre. For very long runs where voltage drop is the sizing constraint, you may find that a 185 mm² aluminium cable meets the voltage drop requirement at lower cost than a 120 mm² copper cable. Compare using Tables 4D4B (copper) and 4H4B (aluminium).
The mV/A/m values in BS 7671 are tabulated at maximum conductor operating temperature (70°C for PVC, 90°C for XLPE). Conductor resistance increases with temperature, so a cable operating below its rated temperature will have a lower actual voltage drop than the tabulated value. In industrial installations where cables are lightly loaded relative to their rating, the real voltage drop may be 10-20% less than calculated.

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