Here's one for you. If you double up a run of a certain gauge, you drop 3 numbers in gauge (i.e. 2 runs of 4 ga is the same as 1 run of 1 ga). If you know the gauge of the individual strands, you can figure out how many strands you need to get the desired final gauge.im learning, and always wonder how they came up with the sizes anyhow.
thats cool information
Your notation is incorrect. The normal notation for 0ga is 1/0. Going bigger than that is 00, 000, 0000, etc, which are noted with the number of "0s" as the first number followed by the "/" and a "0."so 2 runs of 0/1 is 000/1?
i knew it didnt look right....lolYour notation is incorrect. The normal notation for 0ga is 1/0. Going bigger than that is 00, 000, 0000, etc, which are noted with the number of "0s" as the first number followed by the "/" and a "0."
2 runs of 1/0 (0ga) would be the same as 4/0 (0000ga).
Who makes it? I have seen many "1/0" cheap wires that weren't much larger than 4 gauge.25 feet of 0gauge is 49.00 on ike sound... cheaper then all of them...