Cable Fault Bracing Calculator
Check the cleat strength needed to restrain cables during a short-circuit event, then compare the result against a selected cleat rating or the project Cable Schedule.
Method & Assumptions
During a short-circuit fault, the peak current flowing through adjacent conductors generates repulsive electromagnetic forces. Cable cleats or securing ties must resist these forces across their tributary span. This calculator quantifies the required rated tensile strength of the securing component per IEC 61914:2015.
1. Peak factor κ (IEC 60909-0:2016 §4.3.1.1):
κ = 1.02 + 0.98 × e^(−3R/X)
Range: 1.02 (purely resistive) to ≈ 2.0 (purely inductive). Typical values: LV switchboard X/R ≈ 5 → κ ≈ 1.36; MV cable fault X/R ≈ 15 → κ ≈ 1.73.
2. Peak fault current:
i_peak = κ × √2 × I_sc
3. Electromagnetic force per unit length (Biot–Savart / Ampère's force law):
Single-phase: F = 2×10⁻⁷ × i_peak² / d [N/m] Three-phase: F = √3×10⁻⁷ × i_peak² / d [N/m]
where d is the centre-to-centre cable spacing in metres. The three-phase formula applies to both trefoil and flat (single-layer) arrangements and represents the analytically derived maximum force on the worst-case conductor over one fault cycle.
4. Cleat tensile load:
T = F × L_cleat_spacing [N]
5. Required rated cleat strength (IEC 61914 default safety factor = 2.5):
T_req = T × SF [kN]
Select a cleat whose IEC 61914 rated strength ≥ T_req. Verify the cleat OD range covers the cable outer diameter.
Citations: IEC 60909-0:2016, IEC 61914:2015 — Cable cleats for electrical installations.
See also: Seismic Bracing Calculator, Support Span Calculator, Short Circuit Study.
Calculation Setup
Single Cable- Peak Multiplier
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- Spacing Source
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- Cleat Interval
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- Safety Factor
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Review the inputs above before calculating.
This mode reads cables from the Cable Schedule and evaluates the required cleat strength for each cable using the fault system parameters entered above. Cable spacing is derived from the cable OD in the schedule where available.