You can use up to a 30 amp fuse or breaker with 10 Ga wire.
14 guage wire should not be connected to a breaker larger than 15 amps.
There is no difference in the trip rating between a breaker and a fuse. (I put breaker because most people who do not know electrical systems call breakers fuses. Fuses screwed into the panel are a very old circuit protection system and not used anymore.)
A #12 copper conductor with an insulation of 90 degrees C is rated at 20 amps. As to what size fuse, for normal installations a 20 amp breaker or fuse will be used. For motor installations the fusing will be higher to allow the inrush of the motor's amperage to not blow the protection.
A #12 copper conductor with an insulation of 90 degrees C is rated at 20 amps. As to what size fuse, for normal installations a 20 amp breaker or fuse will be used. For motor installations the fusing will be higher to allow the inrush of the motor's amperage to not blow the protection.
You can use up to a 30 amp fuse or breaker with 10 Ga wire.
A #14 copper conductor with an insulation rating of 90 degrees C is rated at 15 amps.
15 amp
Couple of things wrong here. 30 isn't a wire size. If you mean a wire that can carry 30 amps that would be # 10. Now it depends on how many # 10 wires you want to put into a conduit that governs the size of the conduit.
American Wire Gauge. Measure the thickness of the cable.
Beats me, the National Electrical Code does not list a #9 awg wire.
The equivalent mm2 cross-sectional area of a 5.26 mm2 conductor is a # 10 AWG conductor. A # 10 AWG conductor size is protected by a 30 amp fuse.
The nearest AWG wire size to 50 sq. mm is 1/0. A 1/0 aluminium conductor with an insulation factor of 75 or 90 degrees C is rated at 180 and 205 amps respectively.
6 AWG wire
The correct size fuse needed is based on the size wire used in the circuit. The size wire needed is based on the load that will be applied to the circuit. 1. AWG 14/2 wire = 15 amp fuse 2. AWG 12/2 wire = 20 amp fuse 3. AWG 10/2 wire = 30 amp fuse 4. AWG 8/2 wire = 40 amp fuse
AWG # 8 copper
AWG # 8 copper.
AWG # 6 copper or AWG # 4 aluminum
AWG 16
#10 refers to the size in AWG (american wire gauge)
AWG #4 copper.
Use only AWG # 10 copper.
A 100 amp service requires that you use AWG 4 copper wire or AWG 2 aluminum wire.
Use a 20 amp fuse or breaker.
Service wire required is AWG # 3/0 copper.