22 AWG has a diameter of 0.0253 inch.
Even assuming you mean 14 swg (or awg) wire, the safe working current, and the fuzing current would have different values. And assuming further that it is copper wire to which you refer.
22' x 3.1416 = 69.1'
22
Remember the circle eq'n C = pi d AlgebraicaLLY REARRGANGE d = C / pi d = 22/3.141502.... d = 7.002817496... ~ 7.0
380.13 square cm.
4 Gauge wire is larger in diameter than 6 Gauge wire.
Size 12 in the American Wire Guage (AWG). It's a wire of about 1/10 inch diameter.
The longer the run, the bigger and heavier the wire will need to be. The AWG number denotes the diameter of the wire: the smaller the AWG number, the bigger the diameter.
A stranded #8 AWG has a diameter of 3.71 mm and a #6 AWG has a diameter of 4.67 mm.
The diameter of the wire measured in MCM, (thousand circular mils). Wire sizes in the U.S. are described in AWG, (American Wire Gauge) such as #12 awg printed on the wire.
AWG # 12 is 2.053 mm in diameter.
The larger the wire gauge, the smaller the diameter. 12 gauge is bigger than 14 gauge.
408.6 mils
Resistance will increase.
18 G has the larger interior diameter. Gauges are based on AWG ( American Wire Gauge ) So therefore the higher the number the smaller the outside diameter, the lower the number the thicker the outside diameter is.
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).
For wire gauge, 1.25 mm diameter wire is closest to 16 gauge (AWG). See related link.