In this tutorial, you will be shown how to use several of EasyPower’s IEC short circuit analysis features.
To run IEC short circuit analysis, you must set the IEC option.
Maximize to fill your screen with the one-line.
Options, and then select the
System tab. Select the following:
Click OK to save your changes.
Short Circuit. The ribbon now contains buttons that you can use in your short circuit
calculations.Double-click on BUS-3. The bus color changes to light blue and displays fault currents in symmetrical kilo-amps. As shown in the figure below, the motor contributes 1.139 kA and the cable, 4.734 kA to the fault. The total bus fault current, shown at a forty-five degree angle, is 5.873 kA.

Figure 1: Momentary Short Circuit Fault
There are several different methods to fault buses while in the Short Circuit focus:
Fault Bus(es).
Note: To select a single bus, click it with the left mouse button. To select extra buses, click them while holding down the SHIFT key.
Fault Bus(es) without selecting any bus. This runs a batch fault on all the buses in your system.The following currents can be calculated in EasyPower:
Momentary in the Short Circuit ribbon.You can view up to 3 types of fault current values by time interval. You can also view fault currents in various forms, such as by phase current values (A, B, C) or their symmetrical component values (positive sequence, negative sequence or 3 times the zero sequence). In the figure below, notice the motor current contribution decays with the time interval.
Figure 2: Initial, 0.05s and >0.25s Currents Display
The currents calculated to this point have been 3-phase fault currents. EasyPower also calculates unsymmetrical faults. According to convention, single line-to-ground fault calculations assume the A-phase is faulted. For double line-to-ground and line-to-line faults, the convention is to fault phases B and C.
Line to Ground. The green dot represents ground fault. When this button is selected, all
subsequent faults will be single line-to-ground faults.
Momentary
Figure 3: Single Line-to-Ground Fault
Double Line to Ground. The green dots represents ground fault.
Figure 4: Double Line-to-Ground Fault
Line to Line. Yellow dots represent phase faults. Faults are now line-to-line
faults.
Figure 5: Line-to-Line Fault
Short Circuit Text Reports from the ribbon.
3-Phase. This returns you to 3-phase fault calculations.
Fault Bus(es). A text report window is created. You can view this report either by
selecting
IEC Short Circuit Report for (drive):\..\simple.dez (Base case) from the
Window button or by double-clicking on the window icon created in the lower left corner. Your text report will look
similar to that in the figure below.

Figure 6: Short Circuit Text Report
Select
SC Options from the ribbon and click the
One-line Output tab.
In this dialog box (shown below) you can also specify Asymmetrical fault currents or Symmetrical and Peak currents to be displayed on the one-line. You can also show fault currents in Per-Unit or MVA units, and display the units.
Figure 7: Short Circuit One-line Output Dialog Box.
This has been a brief overview of EasyPower’s short circuit program. The EasyPower User Manual and Help system cover these and other short circuit features in greater depth.