500mm = 50cm
If the tank is a cube, and each edge is 500mm long, then the volume of the tank is50cm x 50cm x 50cm = 125,000 cm3 = 125 litres.
0.0005
AWG18 wire has a diameter of 0.0403 inches.
It is 19.6850 inches.
If your bag length is 500mm long, the circumference of your drum including your printing plate shall be 500mm. Hence find the diameter of the drum and the plate, then deduct twice the plate thickness (say if the plat is 4 mm, it comes on both sides, so deduct 8mm from the diameter) and derive the circumference of the drum from this number.
500mm = 50cm
If the wire is increased in length, the diameter of the wire should remain the same unless explicitly changed. The diameter of a wire is determined by its cross-sectional area, which is independent of its length.
16-gauge wire has a diameter of 0.05082 inches.
500mm (10mm=1cm)
500mm is 50cm (divide mm by 10).
No, the wire with a diameter of 0.01 mm will have higher resistance compared to a wire with a diameter of 0.1 mm. Resistance of a wire is inversely proportional to its cross-sectional area, so a thinner wire will have higher resistance.
Resistance is inversely related to the diameter of a wire. A larger diameter wire will have less resistance compared to a smaller diameter wire, assuming other factors like length and material remain constant. This is because a larger diameter wire provides more space for electrons to flow through, resulting in less resistance to the flow of current.
large diameter wire simply because it will move easier Technically they would have the same resistance, but the larger diameter wire would allow more current to flow as it would have more room to move.
There isn't a specific diameter. The thicker the wire the more current it can convey. This diameter will be part of your calculations for your circuit.
If the tank is a cube, and each edge is 500mm long, then the volume of the tank is50cm x 50cm x 50cm = 125,000 cm3 = 125 litres.
A wire with a diameter of 4mm corresponds to a wire gauge of approximately 6 AWG (American Wire Gauge). The relationship between wire diameter and gauge is not linear, so different wire diameters can correspond to the same gauge.