Power is the product of amps x volts, it has nothing to do with wire size.
AWG stands for American Wire Gage (gage is spelt gauge in British English)The larger the gauge number, the thinner the wire.
12 awg is larger.
A#18 copper conductor with an insulation factor of 90 degrees C is rated at 6 amps.
120v ac at 100 " the wire is 000 AWG or BS longer length above it is unsafe. IS THERE A SOLUTION SURE 4 wires 0000 at 40 amps will do it for 110v single phase.
Use AWG #10 wire on a 20 amp breaker.
Assuming you are working with 120v, you need #4 AWG copper conductors.
Power is the product of amps x volts, it has nothing to do with wire size.
Power is the product of amps x volts, it has nothing to do with wire size.
Canada and US - 10 mm is larger that #8 AWG and smaller that #6 AWG. To err on the safe side I will use the #6 AWG equivalent of 60 amps, RW90 insulation, copper wire.
AWG stands for American Wire Gage (gage is spelt gauge in British English)The larger the gauge number, the thinner the wire.
per http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_wire_gauge, 18 AWG has 20.95 Ω/km. 600'=183m=0.183km. 20.95 Ω/km *0.183 km = 3.834Ω.
12 awg is larger.
18 AWG copper wire is equivalent to 0.75mm2 nominal. The resistance of a particular copper wire depends on a number of factors like ambient temperature, the type and number of strands of conductor, when plated, the type of plating metal (e.g. tin, silver), etc.A good value to use for solid #18 AWG copper is 21.8 ohms/km.Please see the useful Related Link link below.
A#18 copper conductor with an insulation factor of 90 degrees C is rated at 6 amps.
AWG plc was created in 1973.
American Wire Gauge ( AWG )