F
fire8789
Hi Guys, I'm fairly new to the industry and have sat and passed all the relevant exams to become a Domestic installer. I'm a little stuck with one of my pieces to be assessed by NICEIC. I'm doing a full rewire at my dads house and would like to check that I'm calculating the cable volt drop correctly.
So for radials it seems to be fairly simple.
(mV/A/m) x Ib x L / 1000
So for a light circuit using 1.5mm 2 core I got
29 mV/A/m x 6 amps x 30meters = 5220 / 1000 = 5.22 volts, so would be ok as it's within 3% (6.9V) voltage drop.
The bit I'm not sure on is how you calculate this for a ring main?
I had a guess here so please let me know if this is correct or would be a suitable method to use?
18 mV/A/m x 32amps x 50meters.
So what I did was to half the Ib ampage to 16A as it's on a ring so the current can be divided between the incoming and outgoing cables, then half the length also for the same reason.
So my formula came to
18mV/A/m x 16amps x 25m = 7200 / 1000 = 7.2v which would be acceptable.
Had I not done this the voltage drop would have been way too high (18mV/A/m x 32 x 50 = 28800 / 1000 = 28.8v).
Help would be much appreciated. cheers. Rich
So for radials it seems to be fairly simple.
(mV/A/m) x Ib x L / 1000
So for a light circuit using 1.5mm 2 core I got
29 mV/A/m x 6 amps x 30meters = 5220 / 1000 = 5.22 volts, so would be ok as it's within 3% (6.9V) voltage drop.
The bit I'm not sure on is how you calculate this for a ring main?
I had a guess here so please let me know if this is correct or would be a suitable method to use?
18 mV/A/m x 32amps x 50meters.
So what I did was to half the Ib ampage to 16A as it's on a ring so the current can be divided between the incoming and outgoing cables, then half the length also for the same reason.
So my formula came to
18mV/A/m x 16amps x 25m = 7200 / 1000 = 7.2v which would be acceptable.
Had I not done this the voltage drop would have been way too high (18mV/A/m x 32 x 50 = 28800 / 1000 = 28.8v).
Help would be much appreciated. cheers. Rich