What is a Distribution Transformer?
A distribution transformer (also called a service transformer) is the final step-down device in the electric power delivery chain. It reduces medium-voltage electricity — typically 11 kV or 33 kV from distribution lines — to low-voltage levels suitable for end use: 400 V (three-phase) for industrial and commercial loads, or 230 V (single-phase) for residential consumers.
Distribution transformers are the most numerous type of transformer in any power system. They are energised 24 hours a day, 365 days a year — even when the connected load is zero — making their no-load (core) losses critically important for overall grid efficiency.
Distribution transformers vs Power transformers: Power transformers operate at 66 kV and above between generating stations and grid substations, and are designed for maximum efficiency at 100% full load. Distribution transformers operate at 11–33 kV and are designed for maximum efficiency at 50–70% of rated load — because they run continuously at partial load in real-world conditions.
Working Principle of a Distribution Transformer
A distribution transformer operates on the principle of Faraday’s Law of Electromagnetic Induction. It consists of two (or more) magnetically coupled coils wound around a laminated silicon steel core.
How It Works — Step by Step
- Primary winding energised: When alternating current flows through the primary winding (N₁ turns), it generates an alternating magnetic flux in the silicon steel core.
- Mutual induction: This alternating magnetic flux links with the secondary winding (N₂ turns), inducing an alternating EMF in it as per Faraday’s Law.
- Voltage transformation: The ratio of induced voltages equals the turns ratio: V₁/V₂ = N₁/N₂. For a step-down transformer, N₁ > N₂, so V₂ < V₁.
- Current transformation: Since power is conserved (minus losses), when voltage is stepped down, current is stepped up: I₁/I₂ = N₂/N₁.
A 100 kVA, 11,000/433 V transformer has a turns ratio of approximately 25.4:1. For every 25.4 turns on the primary, there is 1 turn on the secondary. When 11 kV is applied, the output is 433 V — ready for industrial 3-phase distribution.
Types of Distribution Transformers by Installation
Distribution transformers are classified by how and where they are installed. Each type is optimised for specific physical, safety, and operational requirements.
1. Pole-Mounted Transformers
The most common type in rural and semi-urban India. These transformers are mounted on wooden or concrete utility poles at heights of 5–8 metres. They are predominantly used for single-phase or three-phase supplies to residential areas, agricultural feeders, and small commercial establishments.
- Capacity range: 10 kVA to 200 kVA
- Primary voltage: 11 kV or 33 kV
- Installation: On cross-arms fixed to utility poles, outdoors
- Cooling: ONAN (Oil Natural Air Natural) — oil-immersed
- Key advantage: Low installation cost, easy access for maintenance
- Common use: APDCL rural distribution feeders in Assam
2. Pad-Mounted Transformers
Pad-mounted transformers are ground-level units enclosed in a tamper-resistant steel cabinet, mounted on a concrete pad. They are standard in urban and suburban environments where overhead lines are impractical.
- Capacity range: 75 kVA to 2500 kVA
- Installation: Ground-level, locked steel enclosure on concrete pad
- Cooling: ONAN or ONAF
- Key advantage: Aesthetic (no overhead lines), secure, suitable for high-density areas
- Common use: Housing complexes, IT parks, commercial developments, substations
3. Underground (Vault/Submersible) Transformers
Installed below ground in vaults or manholes, these transformers serve dense urban areas like city centres and metro projects where surface space is at a premium.
- Capacity range: 150 kVA to 2500 kVA
- Must be hermetically sealed against moisture and water ingress
- Uses non-toxic vegetable-based or synthetic ester oil
- Common use: Metro stations, airports, CBD commercial districts
Types of Distribution Transformers by Insulation Medium
The insulation and cooling medium determines where and how a transformer can be installed, its fire risk, maintenance needs, and overall cost.
Oil-Immersed vs Dry-Type — Detailed Comparison
| Parameter | Oil-Immersed | Dry-Type (Cast Resin) |
|---|---|---|
| Insulation medium | Mineral oil / ester fluid | Epoxy resin / air |
| Fire risk | Moderate (mineral oil flammable) | Very low (self-extinguishing) |
| Installation location | Outdoors, substations, industrial | Indoors: hospitals, malls, data centres |
| Efficiency | Higher (better heat dissipation) | Slightly lower |
| Maintenance | Oil testing/replacement required | Virtually maintenance-free |
| Overload capability | Better (oil absorbs heat spikes) | Limited |
| Cost | Lower initial cost | 30–50% higher initial cost |
| Noise level | Lower | Slightly higher |
| BIS standard | IS 1180 Part 1 | IS 11171 |
| Best for (India) | DISCOM distribution, rural, outdoor | Urban indoor, IT, healthcare, metros |
Cooling Methods — ONAN, ONAF, OFAF Explained
Cooling method codes are standardised by IEC 60076-2. Each letter in the code represents: internal coolant type → internal flow → external coolant type → external flow.
Vector Groups — What They Mean and Why They Matter
A vector group describes the phase relationship between primary and secondary winding voltages, and the type of winding connection (star or delta). It is critical for parallel operation of transformers and for system fault protection design.
Vector groups are denoted by letters and numbers — e.g. Dyn11, Yyn0. The convention: uppercase letter = primary winding, lowercase = secondary winding, number = clock position of phase displacement (×30°).
Two transformers can only be operated in parallel if they have the same vector group, same voltage ratio, and similar impedance. Connecting transformers with different vector groups in parallel causes large circulating currents that can damage both units. Always verify the vector group nameplate before paralleling.
Transformer Losses and Efficiency
Understanding losses is essential for total cost of ownership analysis. Unlike most electrical equipment, distribution transformers are energised continuously — even at night when load is minimal. This makes no-load losses the dominant economic factor over a transformer’s 25-year life.
Types of Losses
| Loss Type | Also Called | Cause | Behaviour | Reduction method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Core losses | No-load / Iron losses | Hysteresis + Eddy currents in core | Constant — present 24/7 regardless of load | Amorphous core material; thinner laminations; better silicon steel grades |
| Copper losses | Load / I²R losses | Current flowing through winding resistance | Proportional to I² — increases rapidly with load | Larger conductor cross-section; lower resistance windings |
| Stray losses | Eddy losses in structures | Leakage flux inducing currents in tank/clamps | Small — typically 1–5% of total losses | Non-magnetic tank sections; flux shunts |
BIS IS 1180 Energy Efficiency Standards — Level 1 & Level 2
IS 1180 (Part 1) is the Indian Standard for oil-immersed distribution transformers, published by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS). It defines maximum permissible no-load and load losses for each kVA rating. The Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) has defined two Star-Label equivalent levels:
Standard Efficiency
- Minimum mandatory standard for all new transformers
- Enforced since 2021 by BEE notification
- All DISCOM procurement (APDCL, etc.) must meet Level 1
- Sets specific no-load and load loss limits per kVA rating
- Example (100 kVA): No-load loss ≤ 200 W, Load loss ≤ 1750 W
High Efficiency (Mandatory from 2023)
- Stricter loss limits — approximately 20–25% lower than Level 1
- Mandated for RDSS scheme procurement since 2023
- Reduces lifecycle cost significantly despite higher upfront cost
- Required for APDCL new procurement under RDSS/DDUGJY
- Example (100 kVA): No-load loss ≤ 145 W, Load loss ≤ 1475 W
All distribution transformers manufactured and supplied by Prabha Power meet BIS IS 1180 Level 2 efficiency norms and carry the mandatory BIS certification mark. We are an APDCL-approved manufacturer for distribution transformers in Assam and Northeast India. Our transformers are tested at CPRI-accredited laboratories.
Why Level 2 Saves More Money Over 25 Years
For a 100 kVA transformer operating at ₹8/kWh for 25 years: A Level 1 transformer losing 55W more in no-load losses than a Level 2 unit wastes an additional ≈12,045 kWh over 25 years, costing ≈₹96,000 extra in electricity alone — far exceeding any price premium paid for the more efficient unit.
Complete Comparison — All Distribution Transformer Types
| Feature | Pole-Mounted Oil |
Pad-Mounted Oil |
Dry-Type Cast Resin |
Amorphous Core |
Underground Vault |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Typical capacity (kVA) | 10–200 | 75–2500 | 25–3500 | 25–2500 | 150–2500 |
| Primary voltage | 11/33 kV | 11/33 kV | Up to 36 kV | 11/33 kV | 11/33 kV |
| Installation | Outdoor, on pole | Ground level, pad | Indoor preferred | Any | Underground vault |
| Insulation | Mineral oil | Mineral/ester oil | Epoxy resin | Mineral oil | Ester/synthetic oil |
| Fire safety | ⚠ Moderate | ⚠ Moderate | ✓ Excellent | ⚠ Moderate | ✓ Good (ester) |
| Maintenance | Annual oil check | Annual oil check | ✓ Minimal | Annual oil check | Periodic inspection |
| No-load losses | Standard | Standard | Standard | ✓ 70–80% lower | Standard |
| Noise level | Low | Low | Slightly higher | Very low | Very low |
| Upfront cost | ✓ Lowest | Medium | High (+40–60%) | High (+20–40%) | Highest |
| Lifecycle cost | Medium | Medium | Medium-High | ✓ Lowest | High |
| Best application | Rural feeders | Urban/commercial | Hospitals, metros, IT | Long-running feeders | City centre, metro rail |
| IS standard | IS 1180 P1 | IS 1180 P1 | IS 11171 | IS 1180 P1 | IS 1180 P1 |
How to Select the Right Distribution Transformer — Step-by-Step Guide
Selecting the wrong transformer is costly — undersizing causes premature failure, oversizing wastes capital and increases core losses. Follow these steps for a correct selection.
Calculate total connected load
List all electrical loads (motors, lighting, HVAC, equipment) and sum their rated power in kilowatts (kW). For motors, use the nameplate kW; for lighting/resistive loads, rated wattage = kW directly.
Apply demand factor and power factor
Not all loads run simultaneously. Apply a demand factor (typically 0.6–0.8 for industrial, 0.7–0.9 for commercial) and divide by expected power factor (0.8–0.9):
Add a future growth margin
Add 15–25% to your calculated kVA to accommodate load growth over the next 5–10 years. It is always better to slightly oversize than to replace the transformer due to load expansion.
Select the nearest standard kVA rating
Choose the next standard rating above your calculated kVA. Standard ratings as per IS 1180: 25, 40, 63, 100, 160, 200, 250, 315, 400, 500 kVA (for three-phase). Operating a transformer at 60–75% of its rating is the optimal efficiency point.
Choose the correct type for your environment
Outdoor / rural application → Pole-mounted oil-immersed. Urban commercial building → Pad-mounted oil-immersed or dry-type. Indoor hospital / data centre → Dry-type cast resin. Sensitive environment (near water body) → Natural ester oil-filled.
Verify BIS IS 1180 Level 2 compliance
For India, always insist on BIS IS 1180 Level 2 certification. This is now mandatory for most DISCOM procurement. Check the BIS certification number on the nameplate and request test certificates from a NABL/CPRI-accredited laboratory.
Confirm vector group and protection requirements
For standard 3-phase 4-wire LT supply in India: Dyn11 is the standard vector group. Verify protection scheme compatibility (OC/EF relays, HRC fuses) with your electrical consultant. For parallel operation, ensure same vector group as the existing transformer.
Never size a transformer based on installed connected load alone. Connected load is always higher than actual demand. A factory with 500 kW of installed motors rarely runs all of them simultaneously — applying a demand factor of 0.65 and power factor of 0.85 gives a required transformer size of 500 × 0.65 ÷ 0.85 ≈ 382 kVA — making a 400 kVA transformer the correct choice, not a 500 kVA unit.
Standard kVA Ratings — Quick Reference for India
| Rating | Typical Application | Connected Load (approx.) | IS 1180 L2 Max No-load Loss | IS 1180 L2 Max Load Loss |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 kVA | Small shops, clinics, schools, rural houses | Up to 18 kW @ 0.8 pf | 65 W | 600 W |
| 63 kVA | Apartment blocks, small factories | Up to 45 kW @ 0.8 pf | 120 W | 1050 W |
| 100 kVA | Commercial complexes, medium industries | Up to 72 kW @ 0.8 pf | 145 W | 1475 W |
| 160 kVA | Large complexes, heavy commercial | Up to 115 kW @ 0.8 pf | 210 W | 2100 W |
| 200 kVA | Gated communities, office campuses | Up to 144 kW @ 0.8 pf | 240 W | 2450 W |
| 250 kVA | Data centres, industrial units | Up to 180 kW @ 0.8 pf | 280 W | 2900 W |
| 315 kVA | Heavy industries, large mills | Up to 227 kW @ 0.8 pf | 330 W | 3450 W |
| 400 kVA | Shopping malls, hospitals, data centres | Up to 288 kW @ 0.8 pf | 390 W | 4150 W |
| 500 kVA | Large industrial plants, grid feeders | Up to 360 kW @ 0.8 pf | 460 W | 4900 W |