Wire maker Pro Power rates their 7/0.1 at just 250mA when in a cable of 9, with screen around.
Check the nameplate rating on the door or door frame of your washer, it should tell you the amp rating or the kw rating of the machine. If it only has the KW rating of the machine, simply divide the KW rating by the voltage of the receptacle and it'll give you the current (ampere) rating. Typically, a modern washing machine will draw approximately 7-12 amps. However, anticipate a higher amperage when starting the machine as the machine will draw 1.5X the rated current to start the machine (starting current). Regardless of the amp rating, the NFPA-70 (National Electrical Code) requiresa 20 Amp fuse or circuit breaker; and the circuit for the washing machine must be on its own, dedicated circuit.
From what i can tell with the National Electrical Code the smallest wire listed is 18 AWG that is listed at 7 amps and 5.6 for continuous loads which is running for more then 3 hours at a time so i would rate a 20 AWG at about 5 amps MAX and 2.5 for continuous but good luck with that
Use a wire table to find the cross-section area of #33 wire, multiply by 7, then find the AWG for that cross-section.
If we consider the rpm to be 1450, then the full load current of 3 phase, 415V motor is approx 190 amps. Now, the starting current of a induction motor is 5-7 times the full load current. Hence the starting current will be approx 950 - 1330 amps. Similar calculations can be made for below mentioned ratings also: 110 KW, 220 V ------F.L. current: 350 amps 110KW, 240 V-------F.L. current: 325 amps
Motor starting current is typically 5-7 times the rated current of the motor. (For three phase induction motors)
According to Ampere's Law, the strength of the magnetic field around a long, straight wire carrying current is directly proportional to the current and inversely proportional to the distance from the wire at which it is measured. Assuming fixed distance from the wire (meaning that you're measuring in the same place), if you increase the current by 1.75/.25= 7 times, you will also increase the magnetic field by 7 times.
1 mm2 aluminium wire is not easy to buy but 1 mm2 copper wire is rated at 10 amps. Since the conductivity of aluminium is 7/12 that of copper, 1 mm2 aluminium wire would be rated at 7½ amps max (the same amount of heat is produced per metre by a current of sqrt(7/12) times that for copper).
Yes. according to experian.com credit score rating this means that your credit score ranks higher than 99.84% of U.S. consumers. This is current as of 7/7/08.
2.75 * 10^-7 t
7 strands of 29 gauge (AWG) wire
Check the nameplate rating on the door or door frame of your washer, it should tell you the amp rating or the kw rating of the machine. If it only has the KW rating of the machine, simply divide the KW rating by the voltage of the receptacle and it'll give you the current (ampere) rating. Typically, a modern washing machine will draw approximately 7-12 amps. However, anticipate a higher amperage when starting the machine as the machine will draw 1.5X the rated current to start the machine (starting current). Regardless of the amp rating, the NFPA-70 (National Electrical Code) requiresa 20 Amp fuse or circuit breaker; and the circuit for the washing machine must be on its own, dedicated circuit.
there are 7 credit rating agencies in INDIA
From what i can tell with the National Electrical Code the smallest wire listed is 18 AWG that is listed at 7 amps and 5.6 for continuous loads which is running for more then 3 hours at a time so i would rate a 20 AWG at about 5 amps MAX and 2.5 for continuous but good luck with that
7
10%
Use a wire table to find the cross-section area of #33 wire, multiply by 7, then find the AWG for that cross-section.
definetely M.