English interpretation.

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dougie
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Joined: Wed Aug 04, 2010 6:19 pm
Location: Burlington Ontario, Canada

Re: English interpretation.

Post by dougie »

Chuey wrote:I stopped at a car stereo place on the way to work. They have some 4guage wire with thick insulation. They didn't know how much to sell it for. I went away empty handed. I'll try another place soon. Thanks for the answers.

Chuey
I bought some 4 gauge where they sell welders supplies. Good pliable insulation and it was cheap ($1.59 / ft.)
It's great for pos/neg battery/starter cables.
I think it is overkill for the other ground wires, 10 Gauge should be fine for that.
I've spent most of my money on women, motorcycles, and beer.
The rest of it I just wasted.
chasbmw
Posts: 765
Joined: Fri Aug 06, 2010 7:40 am
Location: Bath UK

Re: English interpretation.

Post by chasbmw »

Chuey,

it would have been worth their while to give the wire to you..........
Charles
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Replica 1070 R90/S (based on 82 RT)
1975 R90/6
Chuey
Posts: 7632
Joined: Mon Aug 02, 2010 11:56 pm

Re: English interpretation.

Post by Chuey »

I was wrong when I posted 4 guage. I meant 10 guage. What I liked about the wire the car stereo place had was that it had finer strands and more of them than what I see at the auto parts store. I'll try another place because that's the next step on the bike I'm putting together, so I can put some covers back onto the engine.

Chuey
Major Softie
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Joined: Tue Aug 03, 2010 1:46 pm

Re: English interpretation.

Post by Major Softie »

Chuey wrote:I was wrong when I posted 4 guage. I meant 10 guage. What I liked about the wire the car stereo place had was that it had finer strands and more of them than what I see at the auto parts store.
Chuey
"IN GENERAL":
Fewer (or single) strands can carry more current within the same gauge. More strands = more flexibility.
MS - out
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DaveBBR
Posts: 124
Joined: Sun Aug 15, 2010 9:28 pm

Re: English interpretation.

Post by DaveBBR »

Actually, I think NEC ratings for amperage vs. gauge are for fire and heat generation, since 12 AWG (gauge) is rated for 80 amps when uninsulated in open air.
"You don't stop playing because you get old.
You get old because you stop playing."
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