It depends on the cable. 0 to 5000 volts the minimum bending radius is 6 x diameter of the cable. Above 5000 volts the minimum bending radius is 8 x the diameter of the cable.
Calculate the sum
diameter = 2 * radius
Double the Radius to Calculate the Diameter.
Divide the area by pi (= 3.14159 approx) to get diameter.
You don't. You can calculate iits radius and cross-sectional area but its diameter has insufficient information to calculate its length
To calculate the cross sectional area (CSA) of a cable, you have to use a micrometer to verify its diameter, then divide the diameter by two to get the radius (r). With the radius we can calculate the CSA of the cable.CSA = pi x r2 (Applicable to solid wires only).For example:If a cable is 0.5 cm in diameter, its radius is 0.25 cm.CSA = 0.196349541 cm2You will need to decide to how many decimal places it is appropriate to quote your answer.
The radius of the curve of the inner edge of the bends shall be at least 6 times the external diameter for armoured cable.
Diameter=2piR
Conversion of cable diameter to circle cross-sectional area and vice versa. Scroll down to related links and look at "Conversion of cable diameter to circle cross-sectional area".
It depends on the cable. 0 to 5000 volts the minimum bending radius is 6 x diameter of the cable. Above 5000 volts the minimum bending radius is 8 x the diameter of the cable.
Calculate the area of the ball with a diameter of 12 metres
Calculate the sum
If the wire is soild and circular with a 5 mm diameter, the cross-section area is given by the formula for a circle, which is A = pi/4 x (diameter)2. For 5mm that is pi/4 times 25 or 19.73 square mm.
The diameter would be 6.67 mm
diameter = 2 * radius
If 16mm is the overall diameter of the cable, yes - If that's the diameter of one core, then no.