Earth Fault Loop Calculator _hot_ [TESTED]
The electrician calculates total loop resistance (~1.8 Ohms), forgets temperature rise, and assumes compliance.
By [Your Name/Publication]
But what exactly does this calculator do, and why is it indispensable for any low-voltage installation? At its core, an earth fault loop is the path an electrical fault current takes. It starts at the point of the fault (a live wire touching a metal case), travels through the protective earth (PE) conductor back to the transformer's neutral, and then through the line conductor back to the source. earth fault loop calculator
If the loop impedance is too high, the fault current is too low. A low fault current means a circuit breaker or fuse will take too long—or fail entirely—to trip. During that delay, exposed metal parts can rise to dangerous touch voltages, causing electrocution or fire. The electrician calculates total loop resistance (~1
For decades, calculating this value manually was a tedious, error-prone task involving multi-step formulas, temperature correction factors, and dense lookup tables. Enter the —a digital tool that is transforming how electricians, design engineers, and safety auditors verify protection against electric shock. It starts at the point of the fault