18 gauge solid copper wire is 40.3 mils in diameter, that is 0.0403" stranded would be larger.
No, the higher gauge means a thinner wire.
very thin, with gauges the smaller the number, the bigger the wire. battery wires are on average a 6/8 gauge
Yes, you splice a small length of 16 gauge wire to 18 gauge wire for a repair.
Depends on what kind of steel: 18 Gauge Standard Steel is .0478 Inches. 18 Gauge Galvanized Steel is: 0.0516 inches thick. FYI 18 Gauge Aluminum is 0.0403 18 gage steel is 0.0478 inches thick 18 gage steel is 0.0478 inches thick
They are close but not the same. For example, 14 gauge steel is .0781 inches thick while 14 gauge steel wire is .083 inches thick.
18 gauge is thicker than 20 gauge. 18 gauge is 1.27 mm thick while 20 gauge is .953 mm thick.
Wire gauges are numbers. A thick wire is #4, a thin wire is #18.
A wire gauge is a number that indicates how thick the wire is. A larger gauge number means a thinner wire. Gauge and diameter can be linked by looking up wire tables.
If you are referring to wire thickness according to American Wire Gauge, 12.6 mil or 321 microns.
Standard 23 gauge wire is (0.0226 inches/0.57404 mm) thick in diameter.
The gauge of wire that is 12 volt is 18, 14, and 16.