About 5 A
It's 38 AWG, which fuses at 3 amps.
No, a copper wire that is not carrying a current will not be attracted to a magnet. Copper is not a magnetic material, so it does not interact with magnetic fields in the same way that magnetic materials like iron or nickel do.
250 amps maximum.
Use 2 in copper wire refers to the American Wire Gauge (AWG) standard for copper wire used in electrical applications. AWG 2 copper wire has a diameter of 0.2576 inches and is commonly used for high current applications such as industrial machinery or power distribution systems. It can carry a maximum current of approximately 190 amps.
The wire rating for a # 12 wire is 20 amps. If you are going to continuously load the circuit you need to de-rate the wire by 80%. This brings the current down to 20 x .8 = 16 amps. The wire rating of a # 10 wire is 30 amps. 30 x .8 = 24 amps.
In theory it could insulate the copper slightly and if the copper warmed up enough it could cause slight changes in current. If we are not talking about driving the wire to extreme loads, then no.
The larger in diameter the wire is, the larger the current carrying capacity the wire has.
Electron current in a copper wire is normally composed of electrons.
600amps
Yes. <<>> A #10 copper conductor with an insulation rating of 90 degrees C is rated at 30 amps. A #14 copper conductor with an insulation rating of 90 degrees C is rated at 15 amps.
Heavy copper wire is used for heavy current loads.
The copper wire carries an electric current.
Sorry, there is no such wire size as "30 gauge" in the AWG (American Wire Gauge) system. For the ampacity rating of all standard conductor sizes, go to Table 310-16 of the National Electric Code. If you mean what wire size will carry 30 amps then a #10 copper wire insulation rating of 90 degree C is rated at 30 amps.
Electrical current flow in a copper wire is measured with an ammeter. It is either clamped onto the wire or attached at one end to monitor the amount of current moving through the wire.
In the electrical trade aluminum wire is equivalent to copper wire as it is also used to carry current. To carry the same current as copper wire aluminum wire is up sized to meet the same ampacity.
No, a copper wire that is not carrying a current will not be attracted to a magnet. Copper is not a magnetic material, so it does not interact with magnetic fields in the same way that magnetic materials like iron or nickel do.
for DC load and if its copper wire the cross section of the conductor wire is generally calculated as 1/4 th of the current rating . Eg for a DC load of 16 amp the copper conductor with 4 mm square is selected.
250 amps maximum.