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Overunity Machines Forum



really stupid question.

Started by carlprad, September 25, 2013, 02:49:37 PM

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the_big_m_in_ok

Quote from: carlprad on September 25, 2013, 03:39:36 PM
I attached two images showing the wire I'm looking for.

Each image has magnets and I give their dimensions as a frame of reference.

Can you tell me the AWG of this magnet wire?

Thank you.
@carlprad
       I tried to count the number of turns next to the round 10mm magnet.   I got 14 or 15.   (The turns appear to be overlapped in at least one place on the toroid.)   Then I looked at an Internet conversion list of AWG diameters against mm in width for diameters.   If 15/10mm =  .66mm, then the wire is 22 ga---but it's not a direct correlation in diameters---my finding to the actual guage measurement.
       But, is the European nomenclature meaning "4/10mm" as equal to .4mm?   If so, the wire is 26 ga., which is an actual correlation.   26 ga. wire is .4 mm in diameter.

The wire appears to be that diameter in dimension on the pictured toroid.

--Lee
"Truth comes from wisdom and wisdom comes from experience."
--Valdemar Valerian from the Matrix book series

I'm merely a theoretical electronics engineer/technician for now, since I have no extra money for experimentation, but I was a professional electronics/computer technician in the past.
As a result, I have a lot of ideas, but no hard test results to back them up---for now.  That could change if I get a job locally in the Bay Area of California.

carlprad

Lee

Ok, so you agree with gyulasun, its probably 26 AWG?

Thanks


the_big_m_in_ok

Quote from: carlprad on September 25, 2013, 05:02:53 PM
Lee

Ok, so you agree with gyulasun, its probably 26 AWG?

Thanks
@carlprad
      Visually, on the picture, I'd say, "Yes."   But my question is:  Do the Europeans amongst the Members believe that  '4/10mm' = .4mm?
      I'm familiar with European wiring schematic standards by weight of personal experience.   The written description is something I've never seen, however.

--Lee
"Truth comes from wisdom and wisdom comes from experience."
--Valdemar Valerian from the Matrix book series

I'm merely a theoretical electronics engineer/technician for now, since I have no extra money for experimentation, but I was a professional electronics/computer technician in the past.
As a result, I have a lot of ideas, but no hard test results to back them up---for now.  That could change if I get a job locally in the Bay Area of California.

carlprad

Lastly, what is "0.1mm wire" in AWG?

And, yes, gyulasun you are correct. I meant "enameled".


gyulasun

Quote from: the_big_m_in_ok on September 25, 2013, 05:10:08 PM
@carlprad
      Visually, on the picture, I'd say, "Yes."   But my question is:  Do the Europeans amongst the Members believe that  '4/10mm' = .4mm?
      I'm familiar with European wiring schematic standards by weight of personal experience.   The written description is something I've never seen, however.

--Lee

Hi Lee,

Jean L Naudin has been using fractions for wire diameters for decades now. See here for instance:
http://jnaudin.free.fr/2SGen/indexen.htm 

Maybe the French use it, Germans and others may be not, it is more common to use 0.5 or  .5  formats.

carlprad:

from this link http://www.technick.net/public/code/cp_dpage.php?aiocp_dp=guide_awg_to_metric  0.1 mm wire is equivalent to awg #38