Stopping work is kind of like a rite of passage for maintenance...there shouldn't be very many people out there that have not been in a situation where it becomes obvious that you need to stop right where you are at, reassess the situation, and take a much different approach before proceeding.
As to SCCR...there are quite often some surprises here. Be careful of WHICH short circuit estimation method you use. They are all designed originally back when we did all the calculations by hand, usually with a slide rule. IEEE/ANSI Std. 141 for instance is the most common in the U.S. and IEC 60909 is common elsewhere.
One example of a "short cut" method is to first calculate transformer short circuit current assuming an infinite bus on the primary side. Use a fixed impedance for inductive loads (motors, transformers), and ignore cable impedances altogether.. Depending on the method used these approaches sometimes (but not always) do look at transient conditions in the first few cycles since the goal is just to check AIC conditions (make sure that busbars don't fly apart and that circuit breakers will actually open under instantaneous tripping) This will result in a short circuit calculation which is quite often much higher than it would ever be in reality. However since it is relatively inexpensive to oversize everything in terms of AIC, this is what was commonly done in the past.
Although it's not quite that bad, ANSI/IEEE Standard 141 is pretty close to this extreme, and IEC 60909 isn't far behind. Here is an article that discusses some comparisons of the various methods in a little more detail which some real world charts showing just how far off the calculations can be:
http://www.cired.net/publications/cired ... _paper.pdfWhen it comes to incident energy of course the focus is just the opposite...low short circuit current is quite a bit more problematic than high short circuit current because it will significantly increase trip times, which with most circuit breakers and fuses tends to increase incident energy. So all the above estimating short cuts which resulted in a high short circuit current also result in excessively low incident energy estimates.
So my experience has been that although a lot of equipment might be flagged especially using the IEEE/ANSI Standard 141 method, further and more detailed short circuit studies which are typically available in most power system analysis software with just a few clicks quite often shows that it's not as bad as it looks at first and that many "dangerous" situations are not as bad as they seem at first. That's not to say that if nobody is looking that SCCR doesn't matter...far from it. Just that it is usually not as bad as it looks in many cases.
You can usually tell this for a given plant, too. Take a look at past incidents and look at how many of them showed characteristic over-dutied failures...circuit breakers that never tripped, bus bars ripped and bent apart, etc. If you're not seeing signs every time a short circuit fault happens, then the estimation may be overly conservative. If you are, then obviously some work needs to be done.