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The Voltage Drop Calculator helps electrical engineers and electricians determine voltage drop in electrical circuits and verify wire sizes meet code requirements. Calculate voltage loss based on wire size, length, and current load.
Excessive voltage drop causes equipment to operate inefficiently and can damage motors and electronics. Electrical codes limit voltage drop to 3-5% depending on circuit type. Proper wire sizing ensures adequate voltage at load points.
Enter system voltage, current load, wire length, and wire size to calculate voltage drop percentage. The calculator helps select appropriate wire sizes to maintain acceptable voltage levels and ensures code-compliant electrical installations.
Features
Everything you need
- Voltage drop calculations
- Wire size recommendations
- Multiple voltage system support
- Round-trip distance calculations
- Code compliance checking
- Wire resistance database
- Warning indicators for excessive drop
How it works
Simple workflow
- 1Enter system voltage (120V, 208V, 240V, 480V)
- 2Input current load in amperes
- 3Specify wire length (one-way)
- 4Select wire size (AWG)
- 5Review calculated voltage drop percentage
Use cases
Built for real-world scenarios
Circuit design
Size wires for new electrical circuits to ensure acceptable voltage drop.
Code compliance
Verify voltage drop meets NEC requirements (3% for feeders, 5% total).
Motor circuits
Ensure adequate voltage for motor starting and operation.
Long circuit runs
Determine wire size requirements for circuits with long conductor lengths.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Voltage Drop = I × R × 2, where I is current, R is resistance per foot, and 2 accounts for round-trip (hot and neutral). Resistance depends on wire size and material (copper vs. aluminum).
NEC recommends maximum 3% drop for feeders, 5% total (feeder + branch). For 120V circuits: max 3.6V drop (3%) or 6V total (5%). Excessive drop causes equipment problems.
Larger wire (lower AWG number) has less resistance and lower voltage drop. Doubling wire size (e.g., 12 AWG to 10 AWG) approximately halves resistance and voltage drop.
Select wire size based on ampacity (current capacity) and voltage drop. If voltage drop exceeds limits, increase wire size even if ampacity is adequate. The calculator helps identify when upsizing is needed.
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We're always looking to improve our calculators. If you have ideas for new features, improvements, or found something that could work better, we'd love to hear from you.
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