For service sizes of 100 amps and less a #8 bare copper conductor is required.
A 100 amp service requires that you use AWG 4 copper wire or AWG 2 aluminum wire.
35 KVA generator using for load 100 meter length which cable need to used
Approximate overall diameter of the wire is 12.8 mm. If you are looking for metric wire size 95 mm2. 187500 circular mils.
A 100 amp residential service requires a size #8 copper wire, it should be insulated in green.
For service sizes of 100 amps and less a #8 bare copper conductor is required.
Volts * Amps = Watts 220V * 20 A = 4400 Watts BUT!!! You don't want to run a generator at 100% capacity for very long; that should be considered peak conditions only and the generator should be run at 80% or less. The generator will last a lot longer if you run it at 50% capacity (in other words, a generator with 8800 Watt capacity would be a good place to start)
A 100 amp service requires that you use AWG 4 copper wire or AWG 2 aluminum wire.
I would recommend you use AWG # 2 copper or AWG # 1/0 aluminum for that distance and amperage.
For a 100 amp service in copper, a wire size of 3/0 AWG should be used.
The recommended copper wire size for a 100 amp service is typically 3 AWG (American Wire Gauge).
The recommended wire size for a 100 amp aluminum service is typically 2 AWG (American Wire Gauge).
35 KVA generator using for load 100 meter length which cable need to used
Approximate overall diameter of the wire is 12.8 mm. If you are looking for metric wire size 95 mm2. 187500 circular mils.
For a 100 amp service over a distance of 100 feet, the recommended wire size is typically 2 AWG copper or 1/0 AWG aluminum.
A 100 amp residential service requires a size #8 copper wire, it should be insulated in green.
A typical 100 amp service is comparable to a 25 KVA generator. That said, very few homes pull that much load. Most utilities size their distribution systems for a 5 KVA load per home, assuming that not all homes would pull full load at the same time. RPM is a function of the number of poles in the generator. To get 60 Hz power with a two pole generator, you need 1,800 RPM.