Electronic – What’s the suitable wire size for 9VDC @25 Amps line

amperageinterferencesignal integritywire

I am trying to put together the requirements for a cable and I was wondering what would be the most suitable wire size to load the DUT with 25Amps @ 9VDC. I will have few other high current lines 13Amps @ 5VDC. There will also be 2 DC lines 160V @5Amps each.

I was wondering if all of this can be bundled (or what would be the key things to keep in mind) with some other wires carrying RF signals without causing any signal integrity issues.

I plan to use shielded Coax cables (at least 20) and bundle all of it along with some other signal lines (like DIO, SPI, CAN bus, etc) in one cable. The RF signals are not going to have a frequency higher than 15MHz but I will need to sample it quite fast to detect a time difference between 2 signals in 5 nanosecond range.

Would anyone suggest:

  • The right wire size for this application
  • Would there be any issue in regards to RF measurements?

The overall cable length is going to be about 15ft.

Best Answer

You have three things to worry about: heat, voltage drop, and interference.

Interference between your DC and RF wires is probably the least of your problems, unless your high-current lines dump noise onto the RF lines, or the RF lines are really powerful, and dump enough energy into the DC lines to cause problems for whatever you're powering.

For the heat problem, you can probably size the wires as if they were in a car. Find a table of recommended wire sizes, and maybe do a test to see if the wires get hot.

But -- voltage drop is going to be your enemy. Just nine volts implies that you're going to need to restrict the voltage drop to 1/4 or 1/2V (or less -- you know what you can stand). The general way to deal with this is to calculate the maximum resistance that you can stand (i.e., 0.25V / 25A = 0.01\$\Omega\$), look up the resistance per meter (or foot, or whatever) of various sizes of copper wire, then choose a wire diameter that will result in the entire length of your wire run (there and back) to have less resistance than your specified amount.

I suspect that once you get wire that fat, you'll be well above the size you need to be safe from heating.