Speaker cables can run 100 feet before you need to be concerned. If in doubt, use the largest wire (the lower the number the larger the wire) you can find. Large extension cord wireis commonly used for long runs.
A cable is an informal nautical unit of length equal to 185.2 meters.
0.1 of a nautical mile 185.2m
A cable is a nautical unit of length equal to one tenth of a nautical mile.A nautical mile is equal to exactly 1,852 metresSo a cable is equal to 185.2 metres.
There are 1000 m of fiber optic [cable] in 1 kilometer.
There will be 300 pieces of steel cable if it is cut into 8-centimeter lengths. This calculation is done by converting the total length of 24 meters into centimeters (2400 cm) and then dividing by the length of each piece (8 cm).
The maximum allowed length of a Cat-6 cable is 100 meters (330 ft) when used for 10/100/1000baseT. This consists of 90 meters (300 ft) of solid "horizontal" cabling between the patch panel and the wall jack, plus 10 meters (33 ft) of stranded patch cable between each jack and the attached device. Since stranded cable has higher attenuation than solid cable, exceeding 10 meters of patch cabling will reduce the permissible length of horizontal cable. When used for 10GbaseT, Cat-6 cable's maximum length is 55 meters (180 ft) in a favorable alien crosstalk environment, but only 37 meters (120 ft) in a hostile alien crosstalk environment such as when many cables are bundled together. 10GbaseT runs of up to 100 meters (330 ft) are permissible using Cat-6a.
Like all supply cables, it all depends on the CSA of the cable
I'm assuming you mean 430 square meters. "Meters" by itself is a measure of length, not area, like acres. 430 square meters would be a rectangular area, for example, of 43 meters by 10 meters. If this is not your measurement, then you need to re-measure.430 square meters = 0.10625531403 of an acre
To find the number of square meters in 40 meters, you need to multiply the length by itself because you are calculating the area of a square. So, 40 meters multiplied by 40 meters equals 1600 square meters.
The orbiter itself is 37.24 m in length, the external tank is 46.9m, and the Solid Rocket Boosters are 45.6m.
The simple answer, is NO. It depends on the actual connection. From the head unit to the amplifier, it typically is an RCA cable, but if your using "Speaker level inputs" then it would be speaker wire. (with a special harness). However, if your hooking up a Subwoofer to an Amplifier, depending on the guage of wire, Yes. They are universal. Many people typically just use plain speaker wire, however, many use special "Shielded" wire for subwoofers.
Yes. While there are many different types of instrument chords meant for different instruments and even styles, all can be used to connect any instrument to any amplifier. The only exception is that a speaker cable (connecting an amp to a cabinet/speaker), will NEVER work to connect an instrument to an amplifier. Note that, in emergency situations, you can use any instrument cable as a substitute for a speaker cable. This substitution is mildly risky for your speaker, so try to avoid it. Also, NEVER use a bass guitar with a guitar amplifier. It can't handle the low frequencies of a bass guitar. You can use a guitar with a bass amplifier safely, but the tone will not be as good.