Sorry, image sizes corrected.
Kind regards
Justin
Kind regards
Justin
Looks like 1.5 mm2 to me.
The cross-sectional area of (each of the) copper cores.Oh, when you refer to a size like that are you referring to the diameter of just the copper core?Looks like 1.5 mm2 to me.
What is the relevance of that to a round flexible cable?//www.diynot.com/wiki/Electrics%3Aflatpvccables
Do you have a micrometer or vernier caliper which would enable you to measure the diameter of one of the strands (and also count the number of strands)?Well I've measured across the diameter of the copper stranded core having made a fresh cut off the end and it measures 2mm so I'm confused now what type of flex this is.
I'm not totally sure where that leaves us. 1.25mm² flex usually has 40 strands, each of 0.2mm diameter, 1.5mm² flex usually has 30 strands each of 0.25mm diameter and 2.5mm² flex usually has 50 strands each of 0.25mm diameter.Unfortunately I don't have those tools but have counted the stands to be 47 or thereabouts, might have missed 1 or 2.
OK. In that case, coupled with the ~50 strands per core, and despite what stillp suggested, what you have is almost certainly 2.5mm² flexible cable.It measures 10mm across the diameter including the white outer sheath.
All true - in fact far better if one factors in the 'rule of thumb' that, for the sort of sizes we're commonly interested in, the overall diameter of a stranded core tends to be around 10% greater than that of a solid core of the same CSA.And for a stranded cable, 2mm OD is pretty close to 1.78mm. ... That's the usefulness of that table - you don't need to have fantastically precise measuring tools. Because there's a limited range of standard sizes a less-than-precise measurement is usually close enough to one of them to conclude that it must be that one.
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