Hi all, I wish to know what the max amps for #4 awg copper wire is, not aluminum wire. Don't need a formula or anything, just how much it can carry. It will be a very short run, about 5 foot.. thanks
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What is the maximum amperage for #4 awg?
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#4 copper cable, type TW and UF, not more than three in a raceway or cable at 140 degrees fahrenheit, 70 amp
THHN. THWN, not more than three in a raceway or cable at 167 degrees, 85 amps
THHN, THHW, XHHW not more than three in a raceway or cable at 194 degrees, 95 amps
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its the composition of the thermoplastic that makes up the insulation. if you strip off the nylon coating of type thhn and thwn, the basic wire is tw.
THHN wire stands for Thermoplastic High Heat Resistant Nylon which is fully approved and stamped on the wire. THWN is a different approval that came long after THHN and South Wire used to make two separate wires with the different approvals. Now they just make one wire and dual rate it with both approvals. THWN stands for Thermoplastic Heat and Water Resistant Nylon which just adds that it's water resistant. So manufacturers just started to dual rate the THHN wire for both so that they didn't have to run two separate wires everytime.
TFFN is only used on 16 and 18 awg wire. It stands for Thermoplastic Flexible Fixture Wire Nylon which is slightly different than the THHN wire because it has a lower heat resistance and it's not good for wet locations. You can't even get TFFN in any bigger awg sizes because they're all dual rated THHN and THWN.
All of these types of wire fall under the electrical wire category and they're sometimes called building wire as well. The reason is electrical contractors use it and most of the time in buildings and homes. Romex is made with THHN conductors and a ground wire so that you can pull two or three wires through a home or building at once.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/2965021
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romex is a jacketed assembly of two THHN, THWN wires and a bare or fiber wrapped ground wire. The external jacket is not sunlight resistant. the assembly is not recommended for outside use even though the inner conductors may be. type UF is recommended because the jacket is sunlight and moisture resistant and is listed as direct burial. the majority of the above quote is taken from the EZineArticles dot com.
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Originally posted by HayZee518 View Post#4 copper cable, type TW and UF, not more than three in a raceway or cable at 140 degrees fahrenheit, 70 amp
THHN. THWN, not more than three in a raceway or cable at 167 degrees, 85 amps
THHN, THHW, XHHW not more than three in a raceway or cable at 194 degrees, 95 amps
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