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On Tuesday, July 16, 2019 at 5:36:33 AM UTC-5, kinsell wrote:
On 7/15/19 9:04 PM, Charlie M. (UH & 002 owner/pilot) wrote: Fuses and breakers are really to protect the wire from overloads. A 12ga wire is good for a max load of about 20A. We won't get into free air load vs. in a bundle or conduit (it is rated at less). Sooo.....a 12ga wire can carry about 20A load. No, it can carry a whole lot more than that. Residential electrical codes limit it to 20 amps to minimize I*R drops, where the length of the wiring could reach into hundreds of feet. The wiring will actually handle over 200 amps before it starts to melt. Not to be pedantic but ... FAA Advisory Circular AC43-13-1B defines the maximum current along 20ft of 12ga mil-spec (Tefzel) wire across 14Vdc as ~12amps (fig 11-2 continuous current flow) or ~22 amps (fig 11-3 intermittent current flow). Reminder that this is DC, not AC, current we are talking about. Edison pushed DC systems but was beat out (trounced) by Tesla/Westinghouse and their long-haul AC systems due to exactly what we are talking about here. Just sayin'. ;-) Thanks, John References: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_of_the_currents https://www.faa.gov/documentLibrary/...-1B_w-chg1.pdf |
#2
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Thanks.....
My comment was not, "what can it carry before becoming a lightbulb", but what is acceptable for continuous load at a voltage. Basics......small wire carries low load.....fuse keeps wiring from igniting. Big wire carries larger load and/or less voltage drop. Fuse/breaker keeps from a wiring fire. Huge wire is a minor weight penalty. Huge wire may be a PITA to run/fit/connect. Huge wire does NOT "overwork" a device.....the device only uses what it needs until failure...thus.....a fuse or breaker. Would anyone here use a 12ga jumper cable when car has a dead battery?!?! Well.....off in neverland, cold, rainy, etc......I would try rather than quibble. Going to welding cable with suitable clamps would likely yield a better result..... Have a great day.... |
#3
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UH - I am with you on this. My pedantic comments were needlessly complicated for soaringjac's simple initial request. RAS at its best in the weeds.
Light bulbs? Welding cables? What a thought. ;-) - John |
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