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.
60 ampere
14
You cannot pull more amperes from a series string of batteries than the weakest battery. Whatever is the lowest rated is the maximum rating for the string.
The "AF" stands for the Frame Ampere rating, so in this case will be 400 Amp Frame. The "AT" stands for Trip Ampere rating, and in this question will be 300 Amp Trip.
The ampere frame rating for a circuit breaker designates how the circuit breaker should be configured. It also states the trip unit of the amp.
A current rating of a fuse is designed to open a circuit at a specific current flow. This rating is imprinted on the fuse and lets you know what the maximum amount of current the fuse is designed to open at. A fuse is in the circuit to protect the conductor that the current flows through. Never over fuse a conductor's current carrying capacity.
60 ampere
14
A 250 MCM copper conductor with an insulation factor of 75 or 90 degrees C is rated at 255 and 290 amps respectively
30amps
Ampere-hours is a battery hold-up time rating. Volts is a voltage rating. The two are not related, so the question cannot be answered as asked.
You cannot pull more amperes from a series string of batteries than the weakest battery. Whatever is the lowest rated is the maximum rating for the string.
The "AF" stands for the Frame Ampere rating, so in this case will be 400 Amp Frame. The "AT" stands for Trip Ampere rating, and in this question will be 300 Amp Trip.
To find our what charging ampere to use a simple way is to divide the battery Ampere with its ampere hour (i.e. for car batteries they will say 75ah C/20) this means that the battery has 75 ampere rating based on 20 hour rating... as such to find the charging ampere divide 75 by 20 to get a charging ampere of 3.75... this is for a slow charge - to speed up the charge divide the ampere by 5 hours (to charge the battery from empty to full in 5 hours)...
Because neutral doesn't have to carry the load current .This is either used for unbalanced current (in Y-connection) or for earthing purpose which don't require high ampere rating....
The 1N4007 is a diode with forward current rating of 1 ampere, and a reverse voltage rating of 1,000 volts.
600 watts
5 amps