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Why SCCR Cannot Be Reduced to a Breaker Rating

Short Circuit Current Rating is often treated like a label to check and move on.

That is a mistake.

One of the biggest sources of confusion in the field is failing to separate two very different ideas: the ability to interrupt and the ability to withstand. A breaker or fuse may have the interrupting capacity needed to clear a fault, but that does not automatically mean the full assembly behind it can survive that same event safely. That is where SCCR matters.

This becomes even more important in VFD panels.

A drive may show a high SCCR, but only when used with a specific fuse or breaker. Change that protective device, add a low-rated contactor, forget a distribution block, or assume that “equivalent” means “proven,” and the whole panel rating can collapse. In many cases, the weak link is not the drive. It is somewhere else in the fault path.

That is exactly why we wrote this paper.

It is not a generic overview. It is a practical technical note that walks through:

    • what SCCR really means,
    • why it is different from interrupting rating,
    • how UL and IEC approaches compare,
    • how UL 508A logic works in practice,
    • why current-limiting devices can completely change the result,
    • and why VFD users must be careful when relying on tested combinations or substituting “equivalent” protective devices.

We also cover real-world examples.

One example shows how an older panel became unsafe after the available fault current increased at the facility. Another shows how a VFD panel that looked acceptable on paper was actually limited by overlooked components inside the enclosure. In both cases, the lesson is the same: SCCR is never just about one device. It is about the whole assembly.

If you design panels, specify drives, review submittals, or troubleshoot retrofit projects, this paper will help you ask better questions before the fault does it for you.

Download the full technical paper
Get the complete paper on Short Circuit Current Rating (SCCR), including UL and IEC context, VFD-specific considerations, common misconceptions, and practical examples from real panel design situations.

Click here to Download the paper

 

Cette publication est également disponible en : English