Transformer Fault Current Calculator

Estimate symmetrical faults quickly. Compare transformer, source, and feeder impedances. Assess limits with clear values. Review duty before selecting protective devices for safe systems.

Enter Transformer and System Data
kVA
V
Use line-to-line volts for three-phase systems.
%
%
Positive values increase the assumed secondary voltage.
%
Use a negative value only with an approved study assumption.
Use 1.00 unless your study method specifies otherwise.

Upstream Source

kA
Ω
kA
Enter source values referred to the transformer secondary side.

Fault Location and Feeder

mΩ/unit
mΩ/unit
Used only for line-to-ground estimates.
Ω
Ω
Reset Values
Example Data
Capacity Secondary voltage Transformer Z Source fault level Fault location Typical calculated duty
1,000 kVA 480 V, three phase 5.75% 65 kA at LV bus Transformer terminals About 15.8 kA RMS
500 kVA 400 V, three phase 6.00% Ignored Transformer terminals About 12.0 kA RMS
750 kVA 480 V, three phase 5.50% 50 kA at LV bus End of feeder Depends on cable R and X
Formula Used
Base impedance: Zbase = V² / S
Transformer impedance: Ztx = Zbase × (%Z / 100)
Three-phase fault current: I = VLL / (√3 × |Ztotal|)
Single-phase fault current: I = V / |Ztotal|

The calculator separates impedance into resistance and reactance using the entered X/R ratios.

For line-to-ground faults, it uses ILG = Vphase / |Z1 + Z2 + Z0|. The zero-sequence path is an engineering estimate, not a complete grounding study.

How to Use This Calculator
  1. Enter the transformer kVA, secondary voltage, impedance percent, and X/R ratio from the nameplate or approved data sheet.
  2. Choose a source method. Use the available low-voltage fault current when it is known.
  3. Select the fault location. Add feeder length and conductor R/X values for a remote fault.
  4. Choose the fault type. Enter grounding data only for a line-to-ground estimate.
  5. Add the protective-device interrupting rating. Review the calculated symmetrical duty and margin.
  6. Export the result to CSV or PDF for a project worksheet. Validate final settings with a complete protection study.
Transformer Fault Current Guidance

Transformer Fault Current Basics

A transformer fault-current value estimates current during a bolted short circuit. It helps engineers select breakers, fuses, busbars, cables, and protective settings. The result depends on the transformer impedance. Lower impedance produces higher fault current. Higher impedance limits current, but can increase voltage drop during normal operation.

Why Source Strength Matters

The transformer is not always the only limitation. The upstream utility or generator also has impedance. A strong source contributes little impedance. A weak source contributes more impedance. The calculator can use available fault current or an entered source impedance. Use values referred to the low-voltage side. Confirm the utility data applies at the studied connection point.

Feeder Impedance Changes Results

Fault current falls as a feeder becomes longer. Cable resistance and reactance add to the transformer and source impedance. This is especially important for faults at remote panels. Enter conductor impedance values from a reliable cable schedule. Keep units consistent. The calculator uses milliohms per chosen length unit. Select transformer terminals when no downstream feeder should be included.

Understanding Fault Types

A three-phase bolted fault commonly creates the highest symmetrical current. A line-to-line fault is usually lower. A line-to-ground fault depends on the grounding method and zero-sequence path. This tool estimates ground faults with a configurable zero-sequence multiplier and grounding impedance. Use a detailed sequence-network study for critical grounded systems, generators, or multiple transformer installations.

Symmetrical and Peak Duty

Symmetrical RMS current supports interrupting-duty checks. The X/R ratio affects the DC offset during the first cycles. A higher X/R ratio can increase peak asymmetrical current. This page provides an indicative peak estimate. Protective-device labels must be evaluated using their applicable standard, voltage class, closing rating, and listed interrupting rating.

Use Results Safely

Enter nameplate data carefully. Check the selected voltage base. Use conservative impedance tolerances when planning equipment. Compare the calculated RMS fault current with the breaker rating. A passing value is not a complete protection study. Arc-flash energy, coordination, motor contribution, generator behavior, conductor damage limits, and local code requirements need separate evaluation. Ask a qualified electrical engineer to review final designs and field changes.

Motor loads may temporarily feed a nearby fault. Large motors, synchronous machines, and capacitor banks can change the duty. Include their contributions when they are material to ratings.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is transformer fault current?

It is the current that may flow when a short circuit occurs near the transformer secondary. It is mainly limited by transformer impedance, source impedance, and any downstream conductor impedance.

2. Why does lower transformer impedance increase fault current?

Lower percentage impedance creates less opposition to a short circuit. More current can then flow. This may require equipment with a higher interrupting and withstand rating.

3. Which transformer voltage should I enter?

Enter the secondary circuit voltage. Use line-to-line voltage for a three-phase transformer. Use the circuit voltage for a single-phase transformer.

4. What does the source fault current option mean?

It represents available fault current from the upstream supply at the low-voltage bus. The calculator converts that current into an equivalent source impedance.

5. Should feeder impedance be included?

Include it when the fault could occur at a downstream panel or equipment location. Longer feeders usually reduce available fault current.

6. Is the peak current result an interrupting rating?

No. It is an indicative asymmetrical peak estimate based on X/R ratio. Device selection must follow the manufacturer data and applicable equipment standard.

7. Why is a line-to-ground result less certain?

Ground faults depend on transformer connections, grounding method, neutral impedance, cable construction, and return paths. A full sequence-network study provides better accuracy.

8. Can I use this for generator-fed systems?

Use it for an initial estimate only. Generator subtransient reactance, voltage regulation, protection settings, and decay behavior need dedicated modeling.

9. Does this include motor contribution?

No. Large induction or synchronous motors can contribute current during early fault cycles. Add those contributions in a complete short-circuit study.

10. What breaker rating should I compare?

Compare the calculated symmetrical RMS fault current with the device interrupting rating at the actual system voltage. Also verify close-and-latch and short-time ratings where applicable.

11. Is this calculator suitable for final construction documents?

It supports preliminary estimates and worksheets. Final documents should use verified utility data, manufacturer data, project standards, and review by a qualified electrical professional.

Important: This calculator provides an engineering estimate. It does not replace a coordinated short-circuit, protection, or arc-flash study. Verify equipment ratings, standards, and site conditions before making design or safety decisions.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.