The diameter would be 6.67 mm
Take the circumference divided by pi to find the diameter and divide the diameter by two to find the radius.
When you have the radius of a circle and you are trying to find the diameter, multiply the radius by two; the answer is the diameter. If you have the diameter and want to find the radius, divide the diameter by two; the answer will be the radius. The diameter is 54 centimeters.
the radius is half the diameter
Circumference = Pi * diameter
For Unshielded cables, it will 8 multiplies cable diameter and for shielded cables, it is 12 multiplies the cable diameter. However, the smaller the bend radius, the greater is the material flexibility.RegardsKelechi
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.
The diameter would be 6.67 mm
If 16mm is the overall diameter of the cable, yes - If that's the diameter of one core, then no.
You can measure its diameter with a micrometer. For this the cable does not have to be vertical.
The 240 sq. mm cable has a diameter of 17.48 mm. It can carry up to 425 Amps current in a duct and up to 520 Amps in open air.
It depends on the length of th cable and the diameter of the copper cable used.
It is twice its radius or its circumference/pi
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.
The radius of the curve of the inner edge of the bends shall be at least 6 times the external diameter for armoured cable.
Take the circumference divided by pi to find the diameter and divide the diameter by two to find the radius.