Calculate maximum prospective short-circuit current (Isc) at any point in a low-voltage AC circuit per IEC 60909. Supports 3-phase, L-L, L-N, and L-PE faults based on source impedance and conductor data.
Designed for electrical engineers, solar designers, electricians, and facility managers who need to verify equipment safety and code compliance. Whether you're sizing breakers for a commercial panel, designing a PV system, or performing an arc flash study, this calculator helps ensure your installation can safely withstand fault conditions.
The maximum short-circuit current is determined by the total impedance between the source and the fault location, including:
Longer lines, smaller cross-sections, aluminum conductors, or higher-resistance installations reduce the short-circuit current at the load end due to increased line impedance (R + jX).
Where ZL, ZN, and ZPE are the total impedances of phase, neutral, and protective earth conductors, respectively—adjusted for length, material, cross-section, and parallel paths.
How do you calculate maximum short-circuit current?
It’s derived from system voltage and total impedance: ISC = (1.05 × U) / Ztotal, where Ztotal includes both source and line impedances. This tool automates the full calculation—including conductor resistance, reactance, parallel paths, and fault type.
What is SCCR, and why does it matter?
SSCR (Short-Circuit Current Rating) is the maximum fault current a device can safely interrupt. Your calculated ISC must be ≤ the SCCR of all downstream equipment—otherwise, catastrophic failure can occur during a fault.
Does the NEC 125% rule apply here?
Yes—for continuous loads, NEC Article 210.20 requires overcurrent devices to be rated at least 125% of the load current. While this rule governs normal operation, your short-circuit analysis ensures the same device can also handle abnormal fault conditions.
Can this be used for solar systems?
Absolutely. Solar designers use this tool to verify that the short-circuit current from PV strings does not exceed the input rating of inverters or MPPT trackers—a common requirement in UL 1741 and IEC 62109.