Wire question

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11 Oct 2005
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Derbyshire
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United Kingdom
is there any difference between 1.5mm core flex and 0.75mm other than the width ?
 
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You'll need to find some tables, but the thicker a wire is, the more current it can safely carry without melting or catching fire. There are regulations which say that certain circuits have to be wired in certain sizes of wire.

What are you trying to do ?
 
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CSA = Cross Sectional Area
Pi r squared
Square root 1.5 divided by 3.142 times by 2 = width of wire
 
mrmole said:
is there any difference between 1.5mm core flex and 0.75mm other than the width ?
What differences do you think there might be?

Or, to put it another way, why do you think that cables come in different sizes?
 
To answer your question, which no-one else did - essentially the thicker the conductor ('wire') the more current it can carry, so if you are wiring in lights which don't draw alot, you can use thinner and therefore cheaper cable than if you were wiring in a cooker, which draws lots of current
SB :LOL:
 

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