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Event Temporary Power Check

Derated ampacity + voltage-drop check (XLPE Cu 4C×70) for this run — both must pass.

Temporary event runs lie on the ground in the sun, coiled and grouped — derate hard (70–80%) and verify drop at the stage end. Sound and lighting brownouts at full house trace back to this exact calculation.

76%
Cable utilization
Load current124 A
Derated ampacity163 A (catalogue 192 A)
Voltage drop10.2 V = 2.5% (within 3%)
VerdictAdequate

Two checks, both must pass: thermal ampacity (derated) and voltage drop (≤3% for feeders is the common design norm). Long runs usually fail on voltage drop first — the cable that carries the current still can't deliver the volts.

Sources: IS 7098 / manufacturer ampacity tables (typical values); Voltage-drop mV/A/m method

Planning estimate only — interconnection, protection settings and compliance must be reviewed and signed off by a licensed electrical engineer and your utility before energisation.

Use the free Event Temporary Power Check online — Derated ampacity + voltage-drop check (XLPE Cu 4C×70) for this run — both must pass. Runs instantly in your browser: no signup, no upload, mobile-friendly.

About Event Temporary Power Check

Temporary event runs lie on the ground in the sun, coiled and grouped — derate hard (70–80%) and verify drop at the stage end. Sound and lighting brownouts at full house trace back to this exact calculation.

How to use Event Temporary Power Check

  1. 1Pick the cable/conductor and enter the load and run length.
  2. 2Set an honest derating factor.
  3. 3Read utilization, voltage drop and the combined verdict.

Why use Event Temporary Power Check?

  • Two checks in one: derated ampacity AND voltage drop — both must pass
  • Real cable data for common Indian sizes and overhead conductors
  • Derating slider for grouping, soil and temperature reality
  • 3% drop norm enforced with the verdict logic

Frequently asked questions

How do I check if a cable can carry my load?+

Two gates: load current (kW ÷ (1.732 × 415 × PF) for three-phase) must stay under the DERATED ampacity, and voltage drop (mV/A/m × current × length) must stay within ~3%. Long runs usually fail on drop while passing ampacity — this tool runs both gates.

Why derate cable ampacity from the catalogue value?+

Catalogue ratings assume one cable, standard soil/air at reference temperature. Reality groups cables in trays, buries them in hot dry soil, and runs Indian summers — each factor multiplies capacity down. 0.8–0.85 combined is a routine honest derating; ignoring it is how 'rated' cables run hot for years.

What voltage drop is acceptable?+

Common design norms: ≤3% for feeders, ≤5% total to the farthest load. Beyond that, motors start poorly and burn out faster, and every percent of drop is I²R energy you buy without using. For revenue circuits (solar plants), designers target 1–2% — lost volts are lost billing.

The cable passes ampacity but fails voltage drop — now what?+

Upsize for the run, not the load: friction... resistance falls with conductor area, so one size up typically halves the drop. Alternatives: shorten the route, raise the distribution voltage for the trunk, or move the load's supply point. Never 'fix' drop by ignoring it — the symptom bills monthly.

Embed Event Temporary Power Check on your website

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