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==AWG/Metric wire size equivalents==
==AWG/Metric wire size equivalents==
In Europe, wire size is expressed as the number of strands and cross sectional area in mm<sup>2</sup>. For example. 7/0.2 means 7 strands of wire each 0.2mm diameter. In America the AWG numbering scheme is applied not only to individual strands but also to equivalent size bunches of smaller strands. For example. 24 AWG could be made of 1 strand of 24 AWG wire (1/24) or 7 strands of 32 AWG wire (7/32). Standard metric wire sizes do not correspond exactly to American wire sizes. The table below provides approximations of the closest equivalents for the wires most commonly found in the audio industry.<ref name="canford">[http://www.canford.co.uk/technical/pdfs/en/metricawgwiresizeequivalents.pdf AWG/Metric wire size equivalents]</ref>
In Europe, wire size is expressed as the number of strands and cross sectional area in mm<sup>2</sup>. For example. 7/0.2 means 7 strands of wire each 0.2mm diameter. In America the AWG numbering scheme is applied not only to individual strands but also to equivalent size bunches of smaller strands. For example. 24 AWG could be made of 1 strand of 24 AWG wire (1/24) or 7 strands of 32 AWG wire (7/32). Standard metric wire sizes do not correspond exactly to American wire sizes. The table below provides approximations of the closest equivalents for the wires most commonly found in the audio industry.<ref name="canford">[http://www.canford.co.uk/Technical/Article/MetricAWGWireSizeEquivalents Metric/AWG wire size equivalents]</ref>


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Revision as of 10:35, 26 February 2015

American wire gauge (AWG) is a standard wire gauge system used predominantly in the United States and Canada for the diameters of a single non-ferrous, solid, round conductor.[1] Increasing gauge numbers give decreasing wire diameters.

Single core and stranded

The cross-sectional area of each gauge is an important factor for determining its current-carrying capacity and resistance. The AWG of a stranded wire is determined by the total cross-sectional area of the conductor. Because there are also small gaps between the strands, a stranded wire will be about 5% thicker than a solid wire with the same AWG.

AWG/Metric wire size equivalents

In Europe, wire size is expressed as the number of strands and cross sectional area in mm2. For example. 7/0.2 means 7 strands of wire each 0.2mm diameter. In America the AWG numbering scheme is applied not only to individual strands but also to equivalent size bunches of smaller strands. For example. 24 AWG could be made of 1 strand of 24 AWG wire (1/24) or 7 strands of 32 AWG wire (7/32). Standard metric wire sizes do not correspond exactly to American wire sizes. The table below provides approximations of the closest equivalents for the wires most commonly found in the audio industry.[2]

AWG Conductor ø (mm) AWG stranding Metric stranding
32 0.20 1/32, 7/40, 19/44 1/0.2, 7/0.08
30 0.25 1/30, 7/38, 19/42 1/0.25, 7/0.1
28 0.32 1/28, 7/36, 19/40 1/0.315, 7/0.125
26 0.40 1/26, 7/34, 19/38 1/0.4, 7/0.15, 19/0.1
25 0.46 1/25 14/0.12
24 0.53 1/24, 7/32, 19/36 1/0.5, 7/0.2, 19/0.12, 30/0.1
23 0.56 1/23 14/0.15, 32/0.1
22 0.64 1/22, 7/30, 19/34 1/0.6, 7/0.25, 19/0.15, 30/0.12
21 0.72 14/36 13/0.2, 55/0.1
20 0.81 1/20, 7/28, 19/32 16/0.2, 44/0.12
18 0.98 1/18, 19/30, 33/32 19/0.25, 24/0.2, 96/0.1
16 1.30 7/24, 19/29 19/0.3
14 1.63 19/27, 73/32 28/0.3
13 1.78 35/28 50/0.25, 140/0.15
11 2.26 56/0.3, 512/0.1

This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia:American_wire_gauge (view authors).


References

  1. ^ ASTM Standard B 258-02, Standard specification for standard nominal diameters and cross-sectional areas of AWG sizes of solid round wires used as electrical conductors, ASTM International, 2002
  2. ^ Metric/AWG wire size equivalents

Further reading

External links