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|    sci.electronics.basics    |    Elementary questions about electronics    |    72,318 messages    |
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|    Message 70,737 of 72,318    |
|    Tom Biasi to Andy    |
|    Re: Ampacity of 18 gauge wire    |
|    08 Sep 18 20:37:08    |
      From: tombiasi@optonline.net              On 9/8/2018 6:19 PM, Andy wrote:       > On Friday, September 7, 2018 at 2:21:38 PM UTC-5, Tom Biasi wrote:       >> On 9/7/2018 1:13 PM, Andy wrote:       >>> On Friday, September 7, 2018 at 9:15:11 AM UTC-5, jf...@my-deja.com wrote:       >>>> On Thursday, September 6, 2018 at 7:05:57 AM UTC-7, Andy wrote:       >>>>> I looked at an ampacity table but it was confusing.       >>>>>       >>>>> Would a 4 ft. length of 18 AWG wire be ok for a 10 amp load.? (Circular       saw)       >>>>>       >>>>> Thanks,       >>>>> Andy       >>>>       >>>> This is a false economy. You can get a 6 ft 16 gauge extension cord,       rated for 13A, from Lowe's for US$1.78 plus tax and interest on your credit       card. My opinion is that for this small amount of money, it is not worth       risking your life by being a        cheapskate.       >>>       >>> Not being a cheapskate. Just frugal.       >>>       >> Using 18 gauge wire on a circular saw is not recommended. It should be       >> on a 15 amp circuit at least. That would mean 14 gauge wire if hard       >> wired. If you are using an extension cord I would not go smaller than 16 ga.       >       > My microwave went out. I salvaged the cord. It was at least 14 gauge.       >       > Andy       >       Are you going to make an extension cord out of it?              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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