If the voltage is supplying any current through the cable, i.e. if there is
any 'load' at the end, then the voltage will drop through the cable.
The voltage drop depends on the current through the cable.For DC current in cable of 16 mm diameter, at 68° F, the voltage drop is(0.00857) x (current, Amperes) volts.
There is voltage drop over any sysetm that does not have infinitely low resistance, but with reasonable cable size there would be very little drop over 200 metres. The number of phases makes little difference.
A wire size of 250 MCM will limit the voltage drop to 3% over a distance of 200 feet.
This is a voltage drop question. To answer this question a voltage must be given.
AC card have over/under voltage adjustment for fault. If voltage drop to that range it will trip the fault. Also the unit have voltage adjustment in the bottom right. Voltage coming out of the cable vs voltage coming out Underwood can be different.
power distribution box is a little box with big wire for busing many smaller circuts voltage drop is a concern with small wire over long distance im not sure what youre asking
If you are referring to residential wiring, then refer to the appropriate tables in BS 7671:2008 Requirements for Electrical Installations (the IEE Wiring Regulations). It's too complicated to be answered in this forum and requires prerequesite knowledge you may not have.
It depends on the voltage being used. That is because the size of the cable is determined by its resistance, and to calculate the allowable resistance you need to know the voltage drop. Lower resistance means a thicker cable. Normally the allowable voltage drop is a percentage of the supply voltage, 5% for example. On a 120 v system this would allow a 6 v drop while on a 240 v system the voltage drop could be 12 v. So for a given load current, the cable for a 120 v system would need half the resistance and double the cross-section area than a cable for 240 v. But for a given amount of power, the current on the 240 v system would be halved, so the cable resistance could be four times higher and its cross-section one quarter of that needed for 120 v. That is why higher voltages are used to transmit power over long distances.
Voltage drop due to the resistance present in the series circuit causes voltage split over a series circuit.
Unanswerable. You need to specify the core size and material. Using two 10 AWG wires with a diameter of 2.6 mm each, the voltage drop over 1500 metres would be less than 1 volt.
The vertical drop of a stream channel over distance is known as the Gradient.
The vertical drop of a stream channel over distance is known as the Gradient.