you need cable tray rated wire to use in a cable try
a cable tray is basically open to air so the current rating of the wire doesnt need to be reduced if you have more than 4 conductors
cable tray rated tubing is fine( temperature flammability) steel or copper is fine.
technically speaking all you do is increase the voltage if the batteries are ran in a series circut and you increase amperage if they are ran in a paralell circut
The first engine that ran on steam power was created in 1813 by George Stephenson, this led to the invention of steam engine trains and many other inventions.
Um. One is hung above your head on telephone poles and the other is ran underground in conduit? Unless you meant something else? Also burying cable costs ~10 times as much for transmission lines as overhead. It also usually has a lower power carrying capability, since it cannot dissipate heat as readily as an overhead conductor.
They ran on water power
The energetic child ran through the park after the dog.
In older cars, a flexible cable ran from the transmission to the speedomer on the dash. The faster the cable was turning, the further it it pushed the needle. I think all of today's cars have electronic speed sensors.
That's a double negative. I would suggest that the cable has broken. all 1992 and newer dnt have a cable it is ran electronicly
get a new cable for it or make sure it is in properly !
New HeadlineI had the same problem on my 1994 Buick Century. It was the result of inadequate battery maintenance. My battery leaked and destroyed the sheathing on the hood release cable (which ran along side the battery tray). This damage added slack in the cable causing it to no longer relase the hood latch. I was able to disconnect the cable from release lever inside the passenger compartment and pull on the cable end with a vice grip enough so that the latch disengaged. This technique may help you before you have to resort to paying someone for help. Good luck. Hey Meyou==TAke it to the body shop. They have to do it a lot when the cars are wrecked. There is about no way to prevent this. GoodluckJoe
Cat 2 cable was rated at 4 or 16 mbps whereas cat 3 cable would be rated at 10 mbps. Since 10baseT networks with Ethernet ran at 10 mbps this meant that cat 2 cable would not be useable in those networks. The minimum category cable for those networks had to be at least a cat 3 cable.
It provides some "shielding" to minimize coupling between signals in a cable, reducing crosstalk and other forms of interference. It is cheaper than the complete shielding provided by coaxial cable, when coaxial cable would be overkill for the problem.
I have seen this on several Catera's. The wire going to the starter and alternator gets about 170 degrees. The main started cable wire goes around in the front of the engine in a plastic condiut and then goes down the right side of the engine and goes very close to the exhaust header and then splits off to the alternator and than to the starter. It is the heat from the engine and exhaust that causes it to get so hot. I tried this on my Catera. I ran another cable the same size as the OEM cable, and ran it straight to the rear firewall and ran it over to the right side firewall, using a condiut making sure it would not short out on any metal, and then down to the starter and then to the alternator. I cut the other cable that was the original OEM, and when I did that the cable I installed never got hot again. I have never read anybody doing this but it worked for me.
They ran it off abs switch on rear end no speedo cable on this one
Alot of people speculate this question, but in reality, yes, most of the time satellite is cheaper than cable. Obviously it depends on your service probably and where you are located on earth.
Yes, Bring the video cable out to the projector. You will need to bring the "RED & WHITE" out to speakers. Once you do that you will have a big screen, as big as your projector will allow. Good luck
Electronic speedometers/odometers do work in both directions. The old cable driven speedometers/odometers ran backwards in while reverse.
the answer is gauge its a measurement of thickness in wire the 4 gauge (ga) wire ran from my car battery to power my audio amp. the smaller the number the bigger the wire usually from 24 gauge to 1/0 gauge which is about a inch thick