Jatuh Tegangan Sirkuit Cabang Multiwire dan Netral Bersama
A multi-wire branch circuit can save copper and raceway space, but it also adds failure modes that a simple two-wire voltage-drop check can hide. The shared neutral carries only the imbalance when the ungrounded conductors are on different phases, yet each line-to-neutral load still needs enough voltage at the far outlet.
Use this page when you are checking split-wired receptacles, kitchen small-appliance circuits, office furniture feeds, 120/208V shared-neutral circuits, or an IEC 230/400V board with several single-phase final circuits. The voltage-drop calculator remains useful, but the inputs must represent the loaded leg you are checking. NEC IEC Ohm's law
What Changes When a Neutral Is Shared
Voltage drop is checked per loaded leg. A 120V load on A-to-neutral does not get to borrow the lower current from B-to-neutral for its hot conductor.
The neutral current is the imbalance, not the simple sum, only when conductors are on different phases or opposite legs. Same-phase conductors sharing a neutral are a dangerous mistake.
Balanced load can reduce neutral drop, but branch-circuit loads rarely stay balanced. Size the installation for realistic worst-case operation.
A lost neutral can place damaging line-to-line voltage across 120V loads, so splices and device connections matter as much as voltage-drop math.
Code and Standard References
- NEC 210.4: defines multi-wire branch circuits and requires simultaneous disconnecting means for ungrounded conductors at the point where the branch circuit originates.
- NEC 300.13(B): the continuity of a grounded conductor in a multi-wire branch circuit cannot depend on a device connection such as a receptacle terminal.
- NEC 210.19(A)(1) informational note and 215.2(A)(1) informational note: many designers still target about 3% branch drop and 5% total feeder plus branch drop.
- NEC 310.15(C)(1): neutral conductors may or may not count as current-carrying conductors depending on the circuit and harmonics; verify before derating.
- IEC 60364-5-52: use the installation method, grouping factor, ambient correction, and voltage-drop limit for the final cable selection.
Shared-Neutral Planning Cases
The table shows how the same calculator can be used safely when the circuit description is accurate. The important choice is which loaded leg and which current to enter.
| Circuit | Shared-neutral condition | Code checkpoint | Calculator approach |
|---|---|---|---|
| 120/240V MWBC receptacles | Two 20A ungrounded conductors share one neutral on opposite legs | Use 210.4(B) common disconnecting means and keep the neutral continuous under 300.13(B) | Treat each 120V leg as its own voltage-drop path; neutral drop cancels only for balanced 120V line-to-neutral load |
| Shared-neutral office circuits | 18A on A leg, 6A on B leg, 140 ft / 43 m run | Neutral carries about 12A imbalance, not 24A, when the legs are opposite phase | 12 AWG copper can exceed 5% on the heavily loaded leg; 10 AWG is often the practical planning size |
| 120/208V three-phase MWBC | Three phase conductors and one neutral feed 120V loads | Handle tie or common trip must satisfy the local interpretation of 210.4(B) | For balanced line-to-neutral loads, neutral current trends toward zero; unbalanced load still creates neutral voltage shift |
| Split kitchen small-appliance circuit | Two 20A countertop circuits share a neutral | GFCI/AFCI device selection must match the shared-neutral arrangement | Voltage drop should be checked on the longest loaded leg, not averaged across both circuits |
| IEC 230/400V shared neutral | Single-phase final circuits derived from a three-phase board | Follow IEC 60364-5-52 for conductor sizing, grouping, and voltage-drop limits | Use the actual phase-to-neutral current and conductor route length; do not assume perfect balance in final circuits |
Worked Examples with Specific Numbers
20A, 120/240V MWBC, 140 ft to last receptacle
Two 20A receptacle circuits share one neutral from a 2-pole breaker. Leg A is loaded at 16A and leg B at 4A. Enter 120V, single phase, 16A, copper, 140 ft, and the conductor size for the A leg. 12 AWG copper is roughly 5.5% drop, while 10 AWG is about 3.5%. The neutral imbalance is about 12A, but that does not erase the hot-conductor drop on leg A.
Three 120V office circuits from a 120/208V panel, 180 ft
Three 15A line-to-neutral circuits share a neutral on A, B, and C phases. If each phase carries 12A, neutral current is near zero, but each phase conductor still drops voltage. Enter 120V, single phase, 12A, 180 ft. 12 AWG copper is about 5.9%; 8 AWG is near 2.3%. NEC 210.4(B) and 300.13(B) still govern disconnecting and neutral continuity.
IEC 230/400V workshop final circuits, 35 m route
A board feeds three 230V single-phase circuits from a 400V three-phase supply with a shared neutral. Check each final circuit at its actual current. At 16A and 35 m, 2.5 mm2 copper may land near 3.2% depending on installation method and temperature; 4 mm2 is closer to 2.0%. IEC 60364-5-52 sets the installation and voltage-drop checks.
Checklist Before You Trust the Result
- Verify the ungrounded conductors are on different phases or opposite legs before treating the neutral as shared.
- Use the longest one-way distance from panel to load, not the round-trip conductor length.
- Run the calculator for the heaviest loaded line-to-neutral leg, then repeat for any different route or load.
- Confirm common trip or identified handle ties, neutral continuity, GFCI/AFCI compatibility, and pigtails where required.
- If the result is near 3% branch drop or 5% total drop, upsize before sensitive electronics, motors, or LED drivers complain.
FAQ
Do I enter the neutral imbalance current in the voltage drop calculator?
Usually no. For a 120V line-to-neutral load, enter the current on the loaded leg, such as 16A on a 20A continuous-use planning check. Neutral imbalance helps neutral heating and neutral voltage shift analysis, but the hot conductor still drops voltage at the full leg current.
Can two same-phase circuits share one neutral?
No. If two 20A conductors on the same phase share a neutral, the neutral can carry 40A. A proper NEC 210.4 multi-wire branch circuit uses conductors with voltage between them, such as opposite legs of 120/240V or different phases of 120/208V.
What voltage-drop target should I use for an MWBC?
Use the same common design targets: about 3% for the branch circuit and about 5% total feeder plus branch, from NEC 210.19(A)(1) and 215.2(A)(1) informational notes. Specifications or an AHJ can require stricter values.
Does the shared neutral count for conductor derating?
It depends. NEC 310.15(C)(1) has conditions where a neutral is not counted and other conditions, especially nonlinear loads and harmonics, where it can matter. Count current-carrying conductors before finalizing ampacity and voltage drop.
Why is NEC 300.13(B) important for voltage drop work?
A receptacle device cannot be the only continuity path for the shared neutral. A loose device terminal can open the neutral and expose 120V loads to abnormal voltage. Pigtailing the neutral protects continuity even when a device is removed.
Use the Calculator One Loaded Leg at a Time
Choose AC single-phase for line-to-neutral loads, enter the actual load current, one-way distance, conductor material, and candidate wire size. Repeat for the worst loaded leg and compare the result with your NEC or IEC target.
Start Calculating
Ready to apply these concepts to your project? Use our professional voltage drop calculator.
Open Calculator