Running wires

Anything electric, AC or DC

Postby Miriam C. » Sat May 03, 2008 4:49 pm

A little search yielded the following max amp/wire gage:
10G:55A
12G:41A
14G:32A
16G:22A
18G:16A


These numbers seem to be from the site below and are for chassis wiring. The chart is great though and has a voltage drop calculator.
http://www.powerstream.com/Wire_Size.htm
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Postby bdosborn » Sat May 03, 2008 5:10 pm

Miriam,

There have been links to this site before and there's a couple of problems with using the information posted there:

- They don't tell you what kind of insulation is on the wire. Different kinds of insulation have different temperature ratings.
- They don't say if the wire is in free air or in conduit. Wire in conduit holds heat in and can't carry as much current as a wire in free air.
- They don't say what the ambient temperature is. Once again, its all about how much heat the insulation is exposed to.

The chart I posted has a couple of assumptions:

- Typical PVC insulation.
- Wires in conduit (or buried in an insulated wall)
- 30C ambient temperature.

As they say on the site

"As you might guess, the rated ampacities are just a rule of thumb. In careful engineering the voltage drop, insulation temperature limit, thickness, thermal conductivity, and air convection and temperature should all be taken into account."

Here's a great wire wizard that takes all these things into consideration:

http://beta.circuitwizard.bluesea.com/

You could probably get away with using the chart with the higher wire ratings but since most people asking for information here don't have a lot of electrical experience it seems prudent to be conservative and not push the limit.

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Postby Miriam C. » Sat May 03, 2008 6:12 pm

:thumbsup: Thanks Bruce. I had that bookmarked one time and lost the whole thing. :oops:
You could probably get away with using the chart with the higher wire ratings but since most people asking for information here don't have a lot of electrical experience it seems prudent to be conservative and not push the limit.

Bruce


Bruce that chart, if you read the right column gives a lower by half amp rating than yours. I think yours is probably the more accurate. My point was that the numbers posted came from the wrong column.

The column you would need to use I think is the "maximum amps for power transmition" which seem low.
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