Posted October 27, 200816 yr Figured id pass this along i think ill be getting some at this price who wouldn't.http://www.sonicelectronix.com/item_11831_...es+UF020BL.htmlhttp://www.sonicelectronix.com/item_11832_...res+UF020R.html Edited October 27, 200816 yr by MemphisMzd
October 28, 200816 yr still more than what I usaully paywhere do you get good 1/0 guage for less than 2 bucks a foot
October 28, 200816 yr Man, I remember paying $1.29 a foot back in the day, at weldingsupply.was that cable flexible. there is a lowes down here with some 1/0 for around 2.50 a foot, but i couldnt even bend their 4 gauge.
October 28, 200816 yr what do you guys look at when you say that the wires are good?i have seen that not all 1/0 wires are the same. check the actual thread counts and look at the material around the strands. some companies use thicker insulation to call their wires 1/0 wires when it really has as many strands as another company's 2 gauge. Edited October 28, 200816 yr by phi
October 28, 200816 yr What makes a wire good ? It's still copper under the insulation...damn, you had to post right before me. lol
October 28, 200816 yr what do you guys look at when you say that the wires are good?i have seen that not all 1/0 wires are the same. check the actual thread counts and look at the material around the strands. some companies use thicker insulation to call their wires 1/0 wires when it really has as many strands as another company's 2 gauge.Copper is copper as far as energy capacity.. "Good" wire usually indicates that it's very flexible, very easy to work with, and easy to cut.The higher the strand count of the copper, the more flexible it typically is. The lesser number and ticker the strands are, the more stiff and harder to work with the wire is.
October 28, 200816 yr still more than what I usaully paythat wire shipped to me is $2.80/foothttp://cgi.ebay.com/1-0-Welding-Battery-Ca...A1%7C240%3A1318$2.46/ftedit- sorry quoted the wrong quote Edited October 28, 200816 yr by cobracommander
October 28, 200816 yr what do you guys look at when you say that the wires are good?i have seen that not all 1/0 wires are the same. check the actual thread counts and look at the material around the strands. some companies use thicker insulation to call their wires 1/0 wires when it really has as many strands as another company's 2 gauge.exactly
October 28, 200816 yr what do you guys look at when you say that the wires are good?i have seen that not all 1/0 wires are the same. check the actual thread counts and look at the material around the strands. some companies use thicker insulation to call their wires 1/0 wires when it really has as many strands as another company's 2 gauge.Copper is copper as far as energy capacity.. "Good" wire usually indicates that it's very flexible, very easy to work with, and easy to cut.The higher the strand count of the copper, the more flexible it typically is. The lesser number and ticker the strands are, the more stiff and harder to work with the wire is.In my opinion flexibility will only count once and that is when you run the wire. I have used wire that wasn't too flexible. Can't complain about it.
October 30, 200816 yr local welding shop 2/0= $2.00 ftFTW!!!!!!!!!!knukoncepts1/0=copper coated aluminum = too muchFTL....
November 2, 200816 yr I went down to my local Lordco and picked up a total of 60 feet of red and black wire (40 red, 20 black), 1/0, and got it for about $50.
November 2, 200816 yr what do you guys look at when you say that the wires are good?i have seen that not all 1/0 wires are the same. check the actual thread counts and look at the material around the strands. some companies use thicker insulation to call their wires 1/0 wires when it really has as many strands as another company's 2 gauge.Well, no. Here's why...The gauge is a cross sectional area of the wire, it has nothing to do with strand count. You can have 1 strand 0 gauage wire and 4000 strand 0 gauge wire. Obviously the 4000 strand wire will be much more flexible, but it will also be much larger in diameter due to all the extra surface area of the individual strands and the (un-perfect) layering of them. The (DC) current capacity of both of these wires will be exactly the same. Many companies have a lower strand count because it is cheaper to produce. Many companies also put thick insulation on to make the wire look even bigger.But, the bottom line is Awg is Awg as far as total amount of cross sectional area. I really doubt even the crappiest companies cheat this, it just appears they do because they use less, but thicker, stands because it is cheaper to produce.
November 2, 200816 yr thats all true assuming companies done lie. and we all no nothing is sacred in car audio. comapnies use awg about as much as the cea 06 amp rating standard
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.