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CalcIntel

Updated · Methodology: named formula library

Electrical Load Calculator

Calculate total electrical load for a circuit.

Ratio
4:1

Value A to Value B = 4:1 (4 as decimal).

Value A100
Value B25
Ratio4:1
Decimal4
Data sources: CalcIntel Formula Library

Why This Calculation Matters

The Electrical Load Calculator helps you price and order materials correctly the first time. Short-ordering means extra trips, delays, and rushed decisions; over-ordering means wasted money and disposal hassle. A precise takeoff, plus a standard 10% waste factor, is the sweet spot.

How to Use This Calculator

  • Enter your values in the input fields, each one has a label and help text explaining what to type.
  • Results appear instantly as you type; there's no "calculate" button to press.
  • Change any input to compare scenarios side by side.

All math happens in your browser. Nothing you type is sent to a server, saved, or shared.

Ordering & Waste Factor

Always add roughly 10% to the calculated quantity. Cuts, edge losses, breakage, and mistakes happen on every project. A small surplus is far cheaper than a supply run mid-pour or mid-install.

How to Use the Electrical Load Calculator

Enter the required values in the input fields on the left. Results update instantly on the right as you adjust your inputs.

Understanding Your Results

Review each output value and its description to understand how your inputs affect the outcome. Adjust values to compare different scenarios.

Tips

  • All calculations happen in your browser, your data is never stored
  • Bookmark this page for quick access
  • Try different values to see how results change

Formula

V = I × R (voltage equals current × resistance). Power: P = V × I = I² × R = V² / R.

Worked Example

100 Value A to 25 Value B

a
100
b
25
Result
4:1 (4.00)

100 / 25 = 4.00. Simplified: 4:1.

When to Use This Calculator

  • Estimate material quantities before ordering, avoid short-loads and wasteful overbuy.
  • Price a bid or budget for a customer accurately.
  • Spot errors in a supplier's take-off or quote.

Limitations & Common Mistakes

  • Add ~10% to material totals for waste, cuts, and breakage.
  • Local building codes, load requirements, and soil conditions may change what you need, always confirm with your permit office or structural engineer.
  • Prices vary by region and supplier; request current quotes before ordering.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is the Electrical Load Calculator computed?

Value A divided by Value B, plus a simplified ratio (e.g., 4:3) using greatest common divisor. Both decimal and ratio forms are useful in different contexts: decimal for math, ratio form for comparisons or recipe scaling.

What does Value A:Value B mean?

It's a comparison: for every Value B unit, you have a corresponding amount of Value A. Useful when the absolute numbers matter less than the proportion (e.g., reading 8:1 LTV/CAC immediately tells you the unit economics are healthy without needing the dollar amounts).

Why simplify the ratio?

4:3 is more readable than 200:150. The simplified form (using greatest common divisor) preserves the proportion while making it easier to interpret. Common simplified ratios: 16:9 (widescreen), 4:3 (legacy displays), 3:1 (LTV:CAC for SaaS).

When is a ratio more useful than the absolute values?

Comparison across scales. A $1B company and a $1M company can both have a 3:1 LTV:CAC; the ratio reveals comparable unit economics regardless of scale. Use ratios for benchmarking; use absolute numbers for budgeting.

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Source: BLS Consumer Price Index, 2026.