Dude thank you so much . I’m taking my final electrical exam in 2 days and this just saved my ass so much . I completely forgot about cma/sma for the exam
Seems to me you have this whole exercise backwards. You are given a piece of wire, it is easy to determine its gauge without resorting to calculation of cma. So you started with a given wire gauge, calculated the cma, then converted it back to (probably) the same gauge. What have you gained? Assuming the wire is from a properly functioning installation, just replace it with the same gauge. A more likely use of cma occurs when you are terminating several wires of different gauges in a single terminal. To determine the proper terminal size, you find the sum of the cma of all the wires and then take that number to the terminal specification charts for the correct selection.
Hello, when summing the cma of multiple wires, do you simply add? Or is there a different way of doing this? Thank you! I know I am three years late but hopefully you see this.
These videos are really helpful, I am on my first year of electrical!
Dude thank you so much . I’m taking my final electrical exam in 2 days and this just saved my ass so much . I completely forgot about cma/sma for the exam
Thank God this video exists. I just finished the last item in my exam
keep the videos coming! very helpful
is the chart that you used for this video also found in the Canadian Electrical Code book?
nope
Could you attach a link to the Chart/Table you displayed towards the end of you Video?
Is this conductor in the 2018 Code Book?
Please I need urgently the source of the formula you used ( cmil = inches*1000 ) squared , I need a source or code for my work.
Seems to me you have this whole exercise backwards. You are given a piece of wire, it is easy to determine its gauge without resorting to calculation of cma. So you started with a given wire gauge, calculated the cma, then converted it back to (probably) the same gauge. What have you gained? Assuming the wire is from a properly functioning installation, just replace it with the same gauge. A more likely use of cma occurs when you are terminating several wires of different gauges in a single terminal. To determine the proper terminal size, you find the sum of the cma of all the wires and then take that number to the terminal specification charts for the correct selection.
Hello, when summing the cma of multiple wires, do you simply add? Or is there a different way of doing this? Thank you! I know I am three years late but hopefully you see this.
My question is, why aren't we using PI in these formulas???? it seems like we are taking a square
Thank you.
very good
Thanks so much