The diameter of an insulated 750 MCM copper wire is 1.25 inches. The insulated 750 MCM copper wiring has 61 strands and has a weight of 2.7 pounds per foot.
Copper wire can be purchased at many different stores. The type you need will determine where you should purchase. Places like Micheal's, Pat Catans, or Hobby Lobby all carry copper crafting wire. If you need something larger you can purchase thicker lines in a larger quantity at you local hardware or big box hardware store.
A 2/0 copper conductor with an insulation factor of 90 degrees C is rated for 195 amps.
CEC - #2 copper, RW90 insulation, 120 amps. #2 aluminium, RW90 insulation, 95 amps. he is not talking about Amplifiers. he is talking about amperes, the unit of measure that indicates how much electricity can flow through a wire. and it depends on the length of the wire, but 2 gauge wire will handle about 208 amps. depends on how big the amps are
In general, you should never use a breaker larger than 20 Amps on a #12 AWG (American Wire Gauge) copper wire.
Well, honey, for a 150 amp service, you'll need a 1/0 AWG copper or 2/0 AWG aluminum ground wire. Don't try to cut corners on this, darling, because you don't want to mess around with electrical safety. Just bite the bullet and get the right size wire for the job.
Copper wire can be purchased at many different stores. The type you need will determine where you should purchase. Places like Micheal's, Pat Catans, or Hobby Lobby all carry copper crafting wire. If you need something larger you can purchase thicker lines in a larger quantity at you local hardware or big box hardware store.
A 2/0 copper conductor with an insulation factor of 90 degrees C is rated for 195 amps.
Visually inspect the wire at the short contact point. If there is no copper loss and the wire was not reduced (big crater hole) where the contact was made you are OK. If there was copper loss then cut the wire back to where the conductor is good and reconnect the dryer. There should be no damage to the dryer if it was not turned on. The breaker tripping was doing its job of protecting the wire from the over current.
it is made of copper that someone twisted around with a big special machine
CEC - #2 copper, RW90 insulation, 120 amps. #2 aluminium, RW90 insulation, 95 amps. he is not talking about Amplifiers. he is talking about amperes, the unit of measure that indicates how much electricity can flow through a wire. and it depends on the length of the wire, but 2 gauge wire will handle about 208 amps. depends on how big the amps are
it is 750 square feet space in regular feet
In general, you should never use a breaker larger than 20 Amps on a #12 AWG (American Wire Gauge) copper wire.
theirs only one wire that hooks to it and it goes on the back end or the flat end and attaches to the copper L shaped connector by screwing a bolt through the O shaped eyelet on end of the big wire and through the hole on the copper L shaped connector!
about 600 km by 750 km
-- winding the wire into a coil-- changing its price-- tie-wrapping it to the outside of a conduit-- shining a flashlight on it-- exposing it to loud noises-- changing the color of its insulating jacketResistance will only be reduced by changing the thickness / physical dimensions (15 small wires wound together vs 1 big one, etc.) of the wire, or the wire's temperature. It's apparent impedance can be changed by placing it in an electric field as well.
copper comes in about in any size, and can be found in ancient mines
There is a wide range of prices for an HD computer, it depends on what you want on it and how big. They can be from around $750 all the way up to over $1,500.