for residential use 2/0 copper or 4/0 aluminum, if your talking long distances then you need to up size for voltage drop
A 10 Gage wire will carry 30 amps. But if you are talking 10 Gage fusible link wire then that's different, a fusible link wire is a delayed fuse & will melt if over loaded. The general rule of thumb in the automotive trade is use a fusible link wire 2 Gage smaller then the load wire. If you are using a 10 Gage wire then you should protect the circuit with 14 Gage fusible link. I hope this helps!
Brown and Sharp wire gage
AWG stands for American Wire Gage (gage is spelt gauge in British English)The larger the gauge number, the thinner the wire.
10 AWG.
This is a voltage drop question. To answer this question a voltage has to be stated. The higher the voltage to the circuit becomes the smaller the wire size needed. After a certain voltage point the wire size will remain constant and the voltage drop at the load will become smaller.
Use 8 gauge wire.
I would run 1/0 gauge.
I recommend no smaller than 8 gage wire. 6 gage or 4 gage if you want a professional type cable. The bigger the wire the better, but the more it weighs. 8 gage is sufficient for most people.
There are a few good services which can be used to wire money. Xboom Is a good service as is The Currency Club. Another good service to use is Caxton.
A 10 Gage wire will carry 30 amps. But if you are talking 10 Gage fusible link wire then that's different, a fusible link wire is a delayed fuse & will melt if over loaded. The general rule of thumb in the automotive trade is use a fusible link wire 2 Gage smaller then the load wire. If you are using a 10 Gage wire then you should protect the circuit with 14 Gage fusible link. I hope this helps!
Brown and Sharp wire gage
AWG stands for American Wire Gage (gage is spelt gauge in British English)The larger the gauge number, the thinner the wire.
10 AWG.
Sure. You can hook this up to any vehicle. It is easy to do. Just make sure you have the proper gage wire for the amp as a small gage wire can heat up. Also with a smaller gage wire you will lose some power to the amp.
As a service entrance wire you need AWG # 3/0 gauge copper.
#6 bare copper wire.
200 amp service in chicago uses 3 aught.