Current Transformer Burden Calculator
Calculate the burden of your current transformer with precision using the standard formula. Enter your CT specifications below.
Comprehensive Guide to Current Transformer Burden Calculation
Module A: Introduction & Importance
The burden of a current transformer (CT) represents the total load impedance connected to its secondary winding, measured in ohms or volt-amperes (VA) at a specified power factor. This parameter is critical for several reasons:
- Accuracy Preservation: Excessive burden causes voltage drop across the secondary winding, leading to ratio errors (typically 0.3% to 3% depending on accuracy class). The IEEE C57.13 standard specifies maximum permissible burdens for different accuracy classes (e.g., 2.5VA for 0.3-class CTs at 5A secondary).
- Safety Compliance: Overburdened CTs can saturate, producing dangerous voltages (up to 1000V+ in extreme cases) that threaten both equipment and personnel. OSHA 1910.303 and NEC Article 450 mandate proper burden calculations.
- Protection Reliability: In differential protection schemes, burden-induced errors can cause false trips (nuisance tripping) or failure to trip during actual faults. A 2019 NERC report found that 18% of misoperations in transmission systems were linked to CT saturation from improper burden.
- Energy Metering Accuracy: Revenue meters (ANSI C12.1) require CT burdens ≤1.0VA for 0.2% accuracy. A 2021 study by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) showed that excessive burdens cause annual revenue losses of 0.5-1.2% for utilities.
The burden calculation becomes particularly complex in modern systems with:
- Long cable runs (lead resistance contributes significantly at >50m)
- Multiple parallel-connected devices (relays, meters, transducers)
- High-frequency components (reactance increases with frequency)
- Digital equipment with nonlinear impedance characteristics
Module B: How to Use This Calculator
Follow these steps to accurately calculate your CT burden:
-
Gather Specifications:
- Secondary current (Is): Typically 1A or 5A (standardized per IEC 61869-1)
- Secondary winding resistance (Rs): Found in CT datasheet (e.g., 0.4Ω for a 200:5A CT)
- Lead resistance (Rl): Calculate as (2 × cable length × resistivity)/cross-sectional area. For 2.5mm² copper at 20°C: 0.0172Ω/m × 2 × length.
- Connected device resistance (Rm): Sum of all meter/relay burdens (e.g., 0.1Ω for a typical electromechanical meter)
- Reactance components (Xs, Xl): Often 20-30% of resistance values for 50/60Hz systems
-
Enter Values:
- Use the calculator fields above, ensuring all units match (ohms for resistance/reactance, amps for current)
- For unknown reactance values, use typical ratios: X/R ≈ 0.25 for copper windings, X/R ≈ 0.1 for aluminum
- Select the appropriate power factor based on your system (0.85 is typical for industrial loads)
-
Interpret Results:
- Total Impedance (Z): Should be ≤ the CT’s rated burden (e.g., 5VA at 5A = 0.2Ω)
- Apparent Power (S): Compare to CT VA rating (e.g., 2.5VA, 5VA, 10VA)
- Voltage Drop (E): Should be ≤ 10% of knee-point voltage for protection CTs
- Accuracy Class: Indicates compliance with IEC 61869 or IEEE C57.13 standards
-
Optimization Tips:
- For long cable runs (>100m), consider using 1A secondaries instead of 5A to reduce lead burden
- Use twisted pair cables to minimize inductive reactance (can reduce Xl by up to 40%)
- For multiple devices, connect highest-burden devices closest to the CT
- Consider temperature effects: resistance increases ~0.4% per °C for copper
Module C: Formula & Methodology
The calculator implements the following standardized equations:
1. Total Resistive Burden (Rtotal):
Rtotal = Rs + Rl + Rm
Where:
- Rs = Secondary winding resistance (Ω)
- Rl = Total lead resistance (2 × one-way cable resistance) (Ω)
- Rm = Combined resistance of all connected devices (Ω)
2. Total Reactive Burden (Xtotal):
Xtotal = Xs + Xl
Where:
- Xs = Secondary winding reactance (Ω) = 2πfLs (typically 0.2-0.5Ω for 50/60Hz CTs)
- Xl = Lead reactance (Ω) = 2πfLl (≈0.08μH/m for twisted pair)
3. Total Impedance Burden (Z):
Z = √(Rtotal2 + Xtotal2)
4. Apparent Power Burden (S):
S = Is2 × Z
Where Is is the secondary current in amperes.
5. Voltage Drop (E):
E = Is × Z
6. Accuracy Class Verification:
The calculator checks compliance with IEC 61869-1 standards:
| Accuracy Class | Max Composite Error at Rated Current (%) | Max Phase Displacement (minutes) | Typical Max Burden (VA at 5A) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.1 | ±0.1 | ±5 | 1.0 |
| 0.2 | ±0.2 | ±10 | 2.5 |
| 0.5 | ±0.5 | ±30 | 5.0 |
| 1.0 | ±1.0 | ±60 | 10.0 |
| 3.0 (Protection) | ±3.0 | ±180 | 15.0 |
Temperature Correction: The calculator applies IEEE temperature correction factors:
Rcorrected = R20°C × [1 + α(T – 20)]
Where α = 0.00393 for copper, 0.00403 for aluminum, and T is the operating temperature in °C.
Module D: Real-World Examples
Example 1: Industrial Motor Protection CT
Scenario: 400A:5A CT protecting a 300kW motor with 50m of 4mm² copper cable to the protection relay.
Given:
- Is = 5A
- Rs = 0.45Ω (from datasheet)
- Rl = 2 × (50m × 0.00445Ω/m) = 0.445Ω
- Rm = 0.12Ω (relay burden)
- Xs = 0.15Ω (20% of Rs)
- Xl = 0.06Ω (50m × 0.0012Ω/m)
- Power factor = 0.85
Calculated Results:
- Rtotal = 0.45 + 0.445 + 0.12 = 1.015Ω
- Xtotal = 0.15 + 0.06 = 0.21Ω
- Z = √(1.015² + 0.21²) = 1.037Ω
- S = 5² × 1.037 = 25.93VA
- E = 5 × 1.037 = 5.185V
Analysis: This exceeds the typical 10VA rating for protection CTs. Solution: Use a CT with higher VA rating (e.g., 15VA) or reduce cable length by locating the relay closer to the CT.
Example 2: Revenue Metering CT
Scenario: 200:5A CT for utility billing with 15m of 2.5mm² cable to an electronic meter.
Given:
- Is = 5A
- Rs = 0.38Ω
- Rl = 2 × (15m × 0.00727Ω/m) = 0.218Ω
- Rm = 0.08Ω (electronic meter)
- Xs = 0.12Ω
- Xl = 0.03Ω
- Power factor = 0.95
Calculated Results:
- Rtotal = 0.38 + 0.218 + 0.08 = 0.678Ω
- Xtotal = 0.12 + 0.03 = 0.15Ω
- Z = √(0.678² + 0.15²) = 0.693Ω
- S = 5² × 0.693 = 17.325VA
- E = 5 × 0.693 = 3.465V
Analysis: Exceeds the 2.5VA requirement for 0.2-class metering CTs. Solution: Replace with a 10VA CT or use 1A secondary to reduce lead burden by 80% (since burden ∝ Is2).
Example 3: High-Voltage Transmission CT
Scenario: 1200:1A CT in a 230kV substation with 200m of fiber-optic cable (negligible resistance) to a digital relay.
Given:
- Is = 1A
- Rs = 1.2Ω
- Rl ≈ 0Ω (fiber optic)
- Rm = 0.5Ω (digital relay)
- Xs = 0.4Ω
- Xl ≈ 0Ω
- Power factor = 0.9
Calculated Results:
- Rtotal = 1.2 + 0 + 0.5 = 1.7Ω
- Xtotal = 0.4 + 0 = 0.4Ω
- Z = √(1.7² + 0.4²) = 1.74Ω
- S = 1² × 1.74 = 1.74VA
- E = 1 × 1.74 = 1.74V
Analysis: Well within the 10VA rating for protection CTs. The fiber-optic cable eliminates lead burden, making this an optimal design for high-accuracy applications.
Module E: Data & Statistics
Comparison of CT Burden Limits by Standard
| Standard | Accuracy Class | Max Burden (VA) | Max Resistance (Ω at 5A) | Max Reactance (Ω at 5A) | Typical Applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IEC 61869-1 | 0.1 | 1.0 | 0.04 | 0.01 | Laboratory standards, precision metering |
| IEC 61869-1 | 0.2 | 2.5 | 0.10 | 0.03 | Revenue metering, high-accuracy protection |
| IEC 61869-1 | 0.5 | 5.0 | 0.20 | 0.06 | General protection, industrial metering |
| IEEE C57.13 | C100 | 10.0 | 0.40 | 0.12 | Protection relays, general purpose |
| IEEE C57.13 | C200 | 20.0 | 0.80 | 0.24 | High-burden applications, older systems |
| IEEE C57.13 | C400 | 40.0 | 1.60 | 0.48 | Special high-burden cases, temporary connections |
Impact of Burden on CT Performance (Empirical Data)
| Burden (% of Rated) | Ratio Error Increase | Phase Angle Error (minutes) | Saturation Voltage Reduction | Typical Effect on Protection |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50% | +0.1% | +2 | 5% | Negligible impact |
| 80% | +0.3% | +5 | 12% | Minor delay in fault clearing |
| 100% | +0.5% | +10 | 20% | Noticeable protection delay |
| 120% | +1.2% | +20 | 30% | Risk of protection failure |
| 150% | +2.5% | +40 | 45% | High risk of misoperation |
| 200% | +5.0% | +80 | 60% | Certain protection failure |
Data source: NIST Electrical Metrology Division (2022) and EPRI Protection Engineering Research (2021).
Module F: Expert Tips
Design Phase Recommendations:
-
Right-Sizing CTs:
- For metering: Select CTs with burden ≤50% of rated VA for future expansion
- For protection: Size for 70-80% of knee-point voltage at maximum fault current
- Use this formula for knee-point voltage: Vknee = (Ifault/CTratio) × (Rct + Rlead + Rrelay) × 1.2
-
Cable Selection:
- Use minimum 4mm² for CT circuits >30m (2.5mm² for shorter runs)
- Twisted pair reduces inductive reactance by 30-40% compared to parallel runs
- For runs >100m, consider 1A secondaries or fiber-optic solutions
-
Device Placement:
- Locate highest-burden devices closest to the CT
- Group similar devices together to minimize cable runs
- Avoid mixing metering and protection CTs on the same secondary circuit
Installation Best Practices:
- Use kelvin connections (4-wire measurement) for critical metering to eliminate lead resistance errors
- Maintain CT secondary circuits separate from power cables to minimize induced noise
- For outdoor installations, use temperature-compensated CTs or apply correction factors
- Always short-circuit CT secondaries before disconnecting to prevent dangerous voltages
Maintenance & Troubleshooting:
-
Periodic Testing:
- Perform secondary burden tests annually using a CT analyzer
- Measure winding resistance with a micro-ohmmeter (should be within ±10% of nameplate)
- Check insulation resistance (>100MΩ for new CTs, >50MΩ for service-aged)
-
Common Failure Modes:
- Open secondary: Causes dangerous voltages (can exceed 1kV). Always use shorting blocks during maintenance.
- Saturation: Check for waveform distortion on secondary during faults. Indicates excessive burden or remanence.
- Insulation breakdown: Test with 2× rated voltage + 1kV for 1 minute (IEEE C57.13 dielectric test).
-
Retrofitting Solutions:
- For overburdened CTs, add burden resistors to match the rated VA
- Replace electromechanical meters (0.2-0.5Ω) with digital meters (0.05-0.1Ω)
- Use CT extenders for long cable runs to boost signal strength
- OSHA 1910.303 (Electrical Systems Design)
- NEC Article 450 (Transformers)
- IEEE C57.13 (Standard Requirements for Instrument Transformers)
- IEC 61869-1 (Instrument Transformers – General Requirements)
Module G: Interactive FAQ
What happens if I exceed the CT’s rated burden?
Exceeding the rated burden causes several critical issues:
- Ratio Errors: The CT will underreport current by 1-5% depending on the overload, leading to inaccurate metering or protection misoperations.
- Saturation: The core may saturate at lower primary currents, causing the secondary current to distort or collapse during faults.
- Overheating: Excessive burden increases I²R losses, potentially damaging the CT insulation (class 130 insulation degrades >200°C).
- Voltage Spikes: Open-circuiting an overburdened CT can produce dangerous voltages (>1kV) due to the high induced EMF.
Immediate Actions:
- Reduce connected load or add burden resistors
- Upgrade to a CT with higher VA rating
- Shorten cable runs or increase cable gauge
- Replace electromechanical devices with low-burden digital equivalents
For protection CTs, IEEE C37.110 recommends derating the burden to 50% of the rated VA for critical applications.
How do I calculate the lead resistance for my installation?
Use this precise formula:
Rlead = (2 × L × ρ) / A
Where:
- L = One-way cable length in meters
- ρ (rho) = Resistivity of conductor material:
- Copper at 20°C: 0.0172 Ω·mm²/m
- Aluminum at 20°C: 0.0282 Ω·mm²/m
- A = Cross-sectional area in mm²
Example: For 75m of 2.5mm² copper cable:
Rlead = (2 × 75 × 0.0172) / 2.5 = 1.032Ω
Temperature Correction: Adjust for operating temperature:
Ractual = R20°C × [1 + α(T – 20)]
Where α = 0.00393 for copper, 0.00403 for aluminum, and T is the operating temperature in °C.
Pro Tip: For buried cables, assume 10-15°C temperature rise above ambient. For cable trays, assume 20-30°C rise.
What’s the difference between 1A and 5A secondary CTs for burden calculations?
The secondary current rating dramatically affects burden calculations due to the I²R relationship:
| Parameter | 1A Secondary | 5A Secondary | Comparison |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical Lead Burden (75m run) | 0.04VA | 1.0VA | 25× lower |
| Meter Burden (digital meter) | 0.01VA | 0.25VA | 25× lower |
| Total Typical Burden | 0.2-0.5VA | 2.5-6.0VA | 10-12× lower |
| Cable Gauge Requirement | 1.5mm² sufficient | 4mm² recommended | Smaller cables |
| Voltage Drop at 20× Current | 4V | 100V | 25× lower |
Key Advantages of 1A Secondaries:
- Lower burden allows longer cable runs (up to 500m vs 100m for 5A)
- Reduced voltage drop improves accuracy during faults
- Smaller cables reduce installation costs
- Better compatibility with digital systems (most modern relays support 1A)
Disadvantages:
- More sensitive to open-circuit conditions (higher induced voltages)
- Requires more careful handling during testing
- Legacy electromechanical relays may not support 1A
Conversion Note: When replacing 5A CTs with 1A, the primary current rating remains the same (e.g., 200:5A becomes 200:1A). The burden reduces by a factor of 25 (5²), but the accuracy improves significantly.
How does power factor affect the burden calculation?
Power factor (cosφ) significantly influences the reactive component of the burden and thus the total impedance:
Z = √(Rtotal2 + Xtotal2) = Rtotal / cosφ
Where Xtotal = Rtotal × tan(arccos(pf))
Impact by Power Factor:
| Power Factor | Phase Angle (φ) | X/R Ratio | Impedance Increase | Apparent Power Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 (Unity) | 0° | 0 | 0% | Minimum VA burden |
| 0.95 | 18.2° | 0.33 | 5% | Moderate increase |
| 0.90 | 25.8° | 0.48 | 10% | Noticeable increase |
| 0.85 | 31.8° | 0.62 | 15% | Significant increase |
| 0.80 | 36.9° | 0.75 | 20% | High impact |
| 0.70 | 45.6° | 1.02 | 30% | Very high impact |
Practical Implications:
- For metering CTs (where accuracy is critical), maintain pf ≥ 0.95
- For protection CTs, pf ≥ 0.85 is typically acceptable
- Low power factors (≤0.8) may require derating the CT’s VA capacity by 15-20%
- Capacitive loads (leading pf) are rare but can cause resonance – avoid if possible
Measurement Tip: Use a power quality analyzer to measure the actual power factor at the CT secondary terminals, as lead reactance can alter the system power factor from the nominal device specifications.
Can I connect multiple devices to a single CT secondary?
Yes, but you must carefully calculate the combined burden of all parallel-connected devices. Follow these rules:
Connection Methods:
-
Direct Parallel:
- All devices share the same secondary circuit
- Total burden = sum of individual burdens
- Ensure total burden ≤ CT VA rating
- Example: 5VA CT can support two 2VA meters (total 4VA)
-
Series Connection:
- Devices connected in series (current flows through each)
- Total burden = sum of individual impedances
- Rarely used due to voltage drop issues
-
Isolated Secondaries:
- Use CTs with multiple secondary windings
- Each winding can have separate burden
- More expensive but provides electrical isolation
Critical Considerations:
- Burden Calculation: For parallel devices, add the VA burdens directly (e.g., 1.5VA meter + 2VA relay = 3.5VA total).
- Cable Effects: The lead burden is counted only once since all devices share the same cables.
- Accuracy Impact: Each additional device increases the total burden, reducing CT accuracy. For 0.3-class CTs, limit to 2-3 devices maximum.
- Protection Coordination: In protection schemes, ensure all relays see the same current (parallel connection maintains current division).
- Voltage Levels: Verify that the combined burden doesn’t cause the secondary voltage to exceed device ratings (typically 10-20V max for relays).
Example Calculation:
A 5A CT with rated burden 10VA connects to:
- Power meter: 1.2VA burden
- Energy meter: 1.8VA burden
- Protection relay: 2.5VA burden
- Cable burden (50m run): 1.0VA
Total Burden: 1.2 + 1.8 + 2.5 + 1.0 = 6.5VA (65% of rated burden – acceptable)
Important: Always leave 20-30% margin for future additions or temperature effects.
What are the most common mistakes in CT burden calculations?
Based on industry studies (including a 2020 EPRI report), these are the top 10 errors:
-
Ignoring Lead Resistance:
- Cable resistance often accounts for 30-50% of total burden
- Solution: Always calculate using actual cable length and gauge
-
Neglecting Reactance:
- Reactive components can add 15-25% to total impedance
- Solution: Assume X ≈ 0.2×R for copper, 0.15×R for aluminum if unknown
-
Using Nameplate VA Without Verification:
- Device nameplate VA may not include cable losses
- Solution: Measure actual burden with a CT analyzer
-
Mixing Accuracy Classes:
- Connecting 0.3-class meters to 1.0-class CTs degrades accuracy
- Solution: Match CT accuracy to the most precise connected device
-
Forgetting Temperature Effects:
- Resistance increases ~20% at 70°C vs 20°C for copper
- Solution: Apply temperature correction factors
-
Overlooking Power Factor:
- Assuming unity pf can underestimate burden by 10-30%
- Solution: Use 0.85 pf for conservative calculations
-
Improper Shorting:
- Not shorting CT during maintenance causes dangerous voltages
- Solution: Always use shorting blocks or switches
-
Incorrect Secondary Current:
- Using 5A devices on 1A CTs (or vice versa) causes 25× burden errors
- Solution: Verify all device current ratings match
-
Ignoring Harmonic Effects:
- Harmonics increase reactive burden (X ∝ frequency)
- Solution: For drives/VSDs, derate CT burden by 20%
-
Poor Documentation:
- Missing as-built drawings lead to unknown burdens
- Solution: Maintain updated single-line diagrams with burden calculations
Verification Checklist:
- Measure actual secondary resistance with a micro-ohmmeter
- Use a CT burden tester to verify total VA
- Perform secondary injection tests to check ratio accuracy
- Thermally scan CTs under load to detect hot spots
- Document all changes to the secondary circuit
According to a NERC 2021 report, 68% of CT-related protection failures involved burden calculation errors, with lead resistance miscalculations being the single largest contributor (32% of cases).
How often should I test my CT burdens?
Follow this comprehensive testing schedule based on industry standards (IEEE C57.13, NETA MTS, and IEC 61869):
Testing Frequency Guidelines:
| CT Application | Initial Commissioning | Routine Maintenance | After Major Events | Recommended Test Methods |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue Metering (0.1-0.3 class) | Before energization | Every 2 years | After any disturbance |
|
| Protection (C100-C800 class) | Before energization | Every 4 years | After any fault >5× rated |
|
| Industrial Metering (0.5-1.0 class) | Before energization | Every 3 years | After electrical storms |
|
| Generator Protection | Before energization | Annually | After any generator trip |
|
Test Procedures:
-
Burden Measurement:
- Use a CT burden tester or secondary injection kit
- Apply 100% rated secondary current
- Measure voltage drop across the secondary circuit
- Calculate burden: VA = Is × Emeasured
-
Ratio Test:
- Inject known primary current (e.g., 20-100% of rating)
- Measure secondary current
- Calculate ratio error: [(Actual – Measured)/Actual] × 100%
- Should be within ±0.5% for metering CTs
-
Saturation Test:
- Gradually increase primary current until secondary current stops increasing linearly
- Record the knee-point voltage (Vknee)
- Ensure Vknee > (Ifault/CTratio) × (Rct + Rlead + Rrelay)
-
Insulation Test:
- Primary to secondary: 2× rated voltage + 1kV for 1 minute
- Secondary to ground: 1kV for 1 minute
- Minimum acceptable: 100MΩ for new, 50MΩ for service-aged
Documentation Requirements:
- Record all test results with date, temperature, and test equipment used
- Compare to baseline commissioning tests
- Note any changes in burden (>10% requires investigation)
- Update single-line diagrams with actual burden values