Voltage dropping problems if cheap components are
used
The following are some examples of the kind of Voltage drop expected
across various gauges of wire on a 100 Watt load (12 Volt X 8.33
Amps).
Gauge |
Voltage drop 10' |
Voltage drop 1 meter (39.37") |
20 |
1.741 |
0.5710 |
18 |
1.096 |
0.3594 |
16 |
0.694 |
0.2276 |
14 |
0.432 |
0.1416 |
12 |
0.272 (actual 0.330) |
0.0892 (actual 0.108) |
10 |
0.171 |
0.0560 |
These Voltage drops are in addition to the drops across the battery tabs,
the welds, thermostat, circuit breaker or fuse or polyswitch &
the outside connector. For a 12 Volt device on a nominal 13.2 Volt
(11 cell) battery you don't have to worry as much about Voltage
drop because you started out with more than you needed, but on a
nominal 12 Volt battery, it is much more critical to try to not
drop the Voltage too much.
Here is a realistic scenario of total Voltage drop on a 12 Volt
NiCad or NiMH battery (using a 100 Watt load).
0.1388 across 2 feet of 16 gauge external cable.
0.0230 across 9 nickel tabs
if they are 0.010" thick X
0.5" wide X 1.5" long
0.0300 across thermostats
(2 Pepi Model B or N-1 in parallel) guestimate.
0.0300 across a quality
in-line fuse.
0.0200 across an
XLR connector.
0.2418 total Voltage dropped
on a 100 Watt load.
>>
Ohm's law calculator .
>>
Wire gauge matrix & Voltage drop calculator .
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