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How is DC cable sizing and voltage drop calculated?

Easy PV returns the smallest cable cross-sectional area that achieves a voltage drop less than 1% of the voltage across the cable (or the largest cable if none do).

The voltage drop along a cable is the product of the current running through it and its resistance. We calculate cable resistances using the stranding class 1/2 values from the IEC 60228/BS 6360 stranding chart. 

Example calculation

In general, we want the cable resistance such that: 

I * R <  1% change 

In this example, we have current at 12 A.  Voltage at 157V so 1% is 1.57V So we have:

12A * R < 1.57V
R < 1.57 / 12 = 0.1308

For the cable sizes in Easy PV (4, 6, 10 mm2), we have the following: 

Resistance at 20  Resistance at 40  Ohms per m (rather than km)
4.61 4.972346 0.004972346
3.08 3.322088 0.003322088
1.83 1.973838 0.001973838