A 10 mm squared conductor is equal to a #8 AWG. A #8 copper conductor with an insulation factor of 75 or 90 degrees C are both rated at 45 amps.
AWG # 12 is 2.053 mm in diameter.
It will taken 8 amps <<>> The conversion of 2.5 sq mm wire to AWG is equal to a #12 wire. The ampacity of a #12 copper wire with an insulation factor of 90 degrees C is 20 amps.
Canada and US - 10 mm is larger that #8 AWG and smaller that #6 AWG. To err on the safe side I will use the #6 AWG equivalent of 60 amps, RW90 insulation, copper wire.
10 amps
Nope - .177 inches is equal to 4.4958 mm (You would need 0.23622 inches to equal 6 mm)
(1 metre) squared = (1000 mm) squared = 1000000 mm squared.
A 10 mm squared conductor is equal to a #8 AWG. A #8 copper conductor with an insulation factor of 75 or 90 degrees C are both rated at 45 amps.
Wire size 0000 AWG is the largest electrical wire. It is 0.46 inches in diameter or 11.86 mm in diameter. The cross sectional area is 107.16 mm(squared).
10 mm = 1 cm So 177 mm = 17.7 cm (About the height of a pint glass.)
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.
See this link.
AWG # 12 is 2.053 mm in diameter.
1 cm squared is 10mm by 10mm so 1cm squared equals 100mm squared
Since there are 10 mm in 1 cm, one must multiply by 10^2 = 100. So the answer is 100,000 mm squared.
For a 200 amp AC circuit, the recommended wire diameter for aluminum is typically around 2/0 AWG (0.3648 inches) and for copper it is around 4/0 AWG (0.4600 inches). Please consult with a qualified electrician or refer to the National Electrical Code for specific sizing requirements for your installation.
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