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I think that's a broadcast item. At the least I want a
copy.
Thanks Al
Mike McGee, RV-4 N996RV, O320-E2G, Hillsboro, OR
13B in gestation mode, RD-1C, EC-2
At 20:29 2006-10-25, you wrote:
I have an Excel spreadsheet
(Mil-W-5088L, Ver. 3) in which you list devices, current requirement,
length of wire, bundled or unbundled, continuous or intermittent; and it
will immediately tell you what wire size is appropriate. I?d be
happy to e-mail direct to you or anyone who needs it.
Al
-----Original Message-----
From: Rotary motors in aircraft
[
mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Dale
Rogers
Sent: Wednesday, October 25, 2006 4:52 PM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: What size II.
Oops, wrong chart. Well, it was the right chart, but not the chart
that had the maximum run length info. It's from a page I got from
the Nuckolls site, but I can't figure out where, so I'll just attach
it.
It's only a two page file.
The first chart came out of AEC Chapter 8 - which has also has
a graph illustrating the relationships for 5, 10, & 30 degree temp
rises (page 10).
Dale R.
Dale Rogers wrote:
Sorry this took me
so long to find, but I knew
that I had seen a chart that shows a relationship
among current, wire size, run length, and
temperature rise. Sure enough, it was in Bob
Nuckolls's AEC. It's on a one page PDF file at:
http://www.aeroelectric.com/articles.html
click on the fifth entry, "pdf wire size
chart".
That at least leaves only the acceptable voltage
drop as an unknown variable.
Dale R.
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