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Yes, as long as it has the necessary ampacity for the load and is properly fastened at each terminal. For example, we have a 4/0 aluminum cable feeding our 200 A subpanel 120 feet away.
A #1 copper wire with an insulation rating of 90 degrees C is rated at 140 amps.
20Sqmm
This is a voltage drop question. A voltage value needs to be stated. Assuming that the 200 amp panel is a single phase 120/240 volt sub panel. A #1 copper conductor will limit the voltage drop to 3% or less when supplying 100 amps for 200 feet on a 240 volt system.
Mars is 754,593,175,850 feet away from the sun.
Yes, as long as it has the necessary ampacity for the load and is properly fastened at each terminal. For example, we have a 4/0 aluminum cable feeding our 200 A subpanel 120 feet away.
A #1 copper wire with an insulation rating of 90 degrees C is rated at 140 amps.
20Sqmm
Depends on the size of the sub-panel in that garage. If you are installing a 60 amp sub-panel 400 feet away from the main service panel then use AWG # 4.
A 3/0 aluminum conductor will limit the voltage drop to3% or less when supplying 125 amps for 175 feet on a 220 volt system. If the 125 amp load is a sub distribution panel that is not going to be fully loaded to 125 amps then using the exact connected load, which might be smaller than 125 amps will effect the wire sizing. The grounding conductor for that size distribution panel is #6 bare copper.
Re Question with the voltage that you will be using.
it is the plastic panel to the left of your feet on the drivers side and to right side of your feet on the passengerside.
A #8 copper wire with an insulation factor of 75 or 90 degrees C is rated at 45 amps.
move and feed
depends on the thickness of the aluminum (3.25 or 4.25 or 4.5 mm) thickness
40 approximate square feet!
A leg press consists of a bench that a person lays back against, a panel where the feet are placed, and a weight. A person would lay back and use their feet to push the weight away from their body.