Electrical – Can wire gauge be increased gradually over the length to compensate for voltage drop

awgdcvoltagevoltage-drop

Assume DC. For a given amperage and distance, does the wire gauge need to be constant over the length of the cable?

For example, assume 3% acceptable voltage loss, 24Vdc, 10 meter, 50 amp. A cable gauge of 2 AWG would be needed to stay within the acceptable voltage drop.

However, over a 1 meter cable, 10 AWG is enough.

If the cable length is 10 meter, could the first meter be 10 AWG, and the remaining 9 meter 2 AWG? Similarly, does the required AWG change gradually as the distance increases?

This calculator was used to arrive at the required AWG: https://www.solar-wind.co.uk/info/dc-cable-wire-sizing-tool-low-voltage-drop-calculator

Best Answer

assume 3% acceptable voltage loss, 24Vdc, 10 meter, 50 amp. A cable gauge of 2 AWG would be needed to stay within the acceptable voltage drop.

If the cable length is 10 meter, could the first meter be 10 AWG, and the remaining 9 meter 2 AWG?

A given length of wire with some of it a smaller diameter will obviously have higher resistance, and therefore higher voltage drop. But will it be acceptable in this case?

The resistance of a 10 m run of 2 AWG wire is ~0.000512 Ω/m * 20 m = 0.01 Ω, * 50 A = 0.512 V, which is 2.1% of 24 V.

A run with 1 m of 10 AWG wire plus 9 m of 2 AWG wire is (0.00328 Ω/m * 2 m) + (0.000512 Ω/m * 18 m) = 0.0158 Ω, * 50 A = 0.79 V, which is 3.3% of 24 V.

So no, it would not meet the acceptable loss requirement.