RW90 is a Canadian Type Wire
# 8 RW90
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
A #1 RW90 copper wire is rated at 140 amps. As always, if you are in doubt about what to do, the best advice anyone should give you is to call a licensed electrician to advise what work is needed. Before you do any work yourself,on electrical circuits, equipment or appliances,always use a test meter to ensure the circuit is, in fact, de-energized. IF YOU ARE NOT ALREADY SURE YOU CAN DO THIS JOBSAFELY AND COMPETENTLYREFER THIS WORK TO QUALIFIED PROFESSIONALS.
The electrical code book provides a chart for conduit fill. The same size conductors have different types and thickness's of insulation which has to be taken into account on wire fill calculations. 1" or 27 mm conduit can carry the following amount of RW90 insulated conductors.25 - #14, 19 - #12, 14 - #10, 7 - #8, 10 - #6, 4 - #4, 3 - #3, 3 - #2,and 1 - #1.
Depends on the utility jurisdiction. In general, 2/2/2/4 aluminum seu will suffice for out buildings. Check with your local building code department. <<>> A #3 copper conductor with a insulation factor of 75 or 90 degrees C is rated at 100 and 105 amps respectively. A #4 aluminium conductor with a insulation factor of 75 or 90 degrees C is rated at 100 and 105 amps respectively.
can use 400mm THW,RHW,RUH (rating: 400mm = 388amperes)
# 8 RW90
Cross link polyvinyl chloride RW90 (PVC) and THHN are two common types of insulation THHN wire stands for thermoplastic high heat resistant nylon coated wire. THWN stands for thermoplastic heat- and moisture resistant nylon coated wire.
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.
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
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the technical stuff! So, a 12 gauge copper wire is typically rated for around 20 amps in most electrical systems. At 240 volts, that wire can handle a decent amount of power without getting all hot and bothered. Just make sure you're not trying to power a whole circus with it, you know?
A #1 RW90 copper wire is rated at 140 amps. As always, if you are in doubt about what to do, the best advice anyone should give you is to call a licensed electrician to advise what work is needed. Before you do any work yourself,on electrical circuits, equipment or appliances,always use a test meter to ensure the circuit is, in fact, de-energized. IF YOU ARE NOT ALREADY SURE YOU CAN DO THIS JOBSAFELY AND COMPETENTLYREFER THIS WORK TO QUALIFIED PROFESSIONALS.
The electrical code book provides a chart for conduit fill. The same size conductors have different types and thickness's of insulation which has to be taken into account on wire fill calculations. 1" or 27 mm conduit can carry the following amount of RW90 insulated conductors.25 - #14, 19 - #12, 14 - #10, 7 - #8, 10 - #6, 4 - #4, 3 - #3, 3 - #2,and 1 - #1.
Depends on the utility jurisdiction. In general, 2/2/2/4 aluminum seu will suffice for out buildings. Check with your local building code department. <<>> A #3 copper conductor with a insulation factor of 75 or 90 degrees C is rated at 100 and 105 amps respectively. A #4 aluminium conductor with a insulation factor of 75 or 90 degrees C is rated at 100 and 105 amps respectively.
The red wire is the positive wire. The black wire is the ground wire. The green wire is the speaker wire. The white wire is the auxiliary wire.
The red wire is the positive wire. The black wire is the ground wire. The yellow wire is the speaker wire. The white wire is the auxiliary wire.
The red wire is the hot wire. The black wire is the ground wire. The green wire is the speaker wire. The white wire is the auxiliary wire.