Transformer Short Circuit Rating Calculator

Analyze fault duty from rating, voltage, and impedance inputs. Compare primary and secondary currents instantly. Export clean results for studies, reports, maintenance, and compliance.

Calculator Inputs

Reset

Example Data Table

Case Rating Voltage Impedance Calculated Side Short-Circuit Current Fault Level
Distribution Unit A 1000 kVA 11 kV / 0.415 kV 6.0 % Secondary 23.19 kA 16.67 MVA
Industrial Unit B 2500 kVA 33 kV / 11 kV 8.0 % Secondary 1.64 kA 31.25 MVA
Plant Service Unit C 500 kVA 6.6 kV / 0.48 kV 5.75 % Secondary 10.46 kA 8.70 MVA

These examples are illustrative and assume transformer-limited fault current without upstream network contribution.

Formula Used

1) Full-load current

For three-phase transformers:
IFL = S / (√3 × V)
For single-phase transformers:
IFL = S / V

2) Per-unit impedance

Zpu = Z% / 100

3) Symmetrical RMS short-circuit current

ISC = IFL / Zpu

4) Fault level in MVA

Fault Level = Transformer MVA / Zpu

5) Peak asymmetrical current

k = 1.02 + 0.98 × e-3/(X/R)
Ipeak = k × √2 × ISC

6) Thermal duty and equivalent one-second current

I²t = (ISC,kA)² × t
I1s,eq = ISC,kA × √t

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the transformer rating and choose kVA or MVA.
  2. Enter primary and secondary voltages with the correct units.
  3. Select whether the transformer is single phase or three phase.
  4. Choose the side where you want the short-circuit current reported.
  5. Enter nameplate impedance percent from the transformer data sheet.
  6. Provide an X/R ratio to estimate peak asymmetrical current.
  7. Enter fault duration for the thermal duty check.
  8. Add an engineering margin if you want a conservative design value.
  9. Click the calculate button to show the result above the form.
  10. Use the CSV or PDF buttons to save the result summary.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What does transformer short circuit rating mean?

It is the fault current the transformer can deliver at a specific side, based mainly on its rated power and impedance. It helps engineers size switchgear, breakers, and bus systems safely.

2. Why does lower impedance create higher fault current?

Lower impedance means less internal opposition to current flow during a fault. Because short-circuit current is inversely proportional to per-unit impedance, a smaller percentage impedance produces a larger available fault current.

3. Should I calculate on the primary or secondary side?

Choose the side where protection equipment or conductors are being checked. The current magnitude changes with voltage level, but the underlying transformer fault level remains consistent when referred correctly.

4. What is the difference between RMS and peak fault current?

RMS symmetrical current is used for interrupting and thermal checks. Peak current includes DC offset effects and is important for mechanical stress, making, and bracing duty evaluations.

5. Why is the X/R ratio included?

The X/R ratio affects the DC offset decay and therefore changes peak asymmetrical current. Higher X/R values usually increase the first-cycle peak duty seen by electrical equipment.

6. Does this calculator include utility source impedance?

No. It estimates transformer-limited fault current only. For a complete study, include upstream network impedance, cable impedance, rotating machines, protective device clearing time, and applicable standards.

7. What is the engineering margin used for?

The margin creates a conservative design current for equipment selection. It is useful when you want extra allowance for assumptions, documentation rounding, or early-stage design decisions.

8. Can I use this result for final protection coordination?

Use it for screening, budgeting, and preliminary selection. Final coordination should be verified with a full fault study, device curves, standard methods, and manufacturer data.

Related Calculators

available fault current calculatorsingle phase transformer calculatortransformer secondary current calculatorthree phase transformer calculatortransformer primary current calculatortransformer inrush current calculatortransformer temperature rise calculatorsecondary voltage of a transformer calculatorkva transformer sizing calculator

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.