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Battery Cable Size Calculator

// SCREEN DC BATTERY AND INVERTER CABLE SIZES FROM CURRENT, ONE-WAY LENGTH, CONDUCTOR MATERIAL, AND ALLOWABLE VOLTAGE DROP //

DC_INPUTS

Low-voltage DC systems often need larger conductors because the allowed voltage-drop budget is small.

Enter the expected continuous DC current on the cable run.

Enter the one-way distance. The tool doubles it automatically for the full DC circuit path.

Copper is more common for battery and inverter cables; aluminum needs larger sizes and compatible terminations.

A 2% to 3% target is common for sensitive battery and inverter circuits.

Round-Trip Length
30 ft
Target Drop
0.36 V
Load Basis
40 A
BATTERY_CABLE_RESULT
Recommended Gauge
3 AWG

26.7 mm2 equivalent

Status
Pass

This conductor clears both the ampacity screen and the selected voltage-drop target.

Estimated Drop
0.29 V
Using full round-trip DC path
Drop Percent
2.45%
Target limit: 3%
Usable Ampacity
100 A
Ampacity is screened as a first-pass planning check only.
Resistance Basis

Estimated from conductor resistance of 0.245 Ω/kft at 20C, scaled over the round-trip length.

Candidate Comparison

Each row checks conductor resistance and basic ampacity against the selected DC load and voltage-drop target.

GaugeMetricAmpacityVoltage DropResistanceStatus
14 AWG2.08 mm220 A30.7%3.07 Ω/kftReview
12 AWG3.31 mm225 A19.3%1.93 Ω/kftReview
10 AWG5.26 mm235 A12.1%1.21 Ω/kftReview
8 AWG8.37 mm250 A7.64%0.764 Ω/kftReview
6 AWG13.3 mm265 A4.91%0.491 Ω/kftReview
4 AWG21.1 mm285 A3.08%0.308 Ω/kftReview
3 AWG26.7 mm2100 A2.45%0.245 Ω/kftPass
2 AWG33.6 mm2115 A1.94%0.194 Ω/kftPass
1 AWG42.4 mm2130 A1.54%0.154 Ω/kftPass
1/0 AWG53.5 mm2150 A1.22%0.122 Ω/kftPass
2/0 AWG67.4 mm2175 A0.97%0.097 Ω/kftPass
3/0 AWG85.0 mm2200 A0.77%0.077 Ω/kftPass
4/0 AWG107.2 mm2230 A0.61%0.061 Ω/kftPass
Worked Examples

12V inverter feeder

A 12V system at moderate current can require a surprisingly large cable because even a few tenths of a volt becomes a meaningful percentage drop.

24V battery bank interconnect

Doubling system voltage cuts percentage drop in half for the same conductor and current, so 24V systems often size more efficiently than 12V layouts.

48V DC equipment run

At 48V, voltage-drop pressure eases further, but long runs and high inverter currents can still force larger copper sizes.

Reference Notes
NEC Chapter 9 Table 8

NEC Chapter 9 Table 8 is a common source for conductor resistance values used in voltage-drop planning.

NEC 210.19(A)(1) & 215.2(A)(1)

NEC branch-circuit and feeder guidance is often used as a planning benchmark even when battery systems need additional equipment-specific review.

IEC 60364-5-52

IEC 60364-5-52 provides an international framework for conductor selection and voltage-drop considerations.

IEC 60228

IEC 60228 helps relate conductor classes and nominal cross-sectional areas to practical cable selection.

Common Mistakes
  • Using one-way length in the voltage-drop math without accounting for the return conductor path.
  • Treating ampacity alone as the final answer on 12V systems where voltage drop is usually the tighter constraint.
  • Selecting aluminum conductors without confirming connector listings, corrosion control, and strand flexibility requirements.
Planning Disclaimer

This tool is a planning screen, not a final engineering approval. Confirm conductor listing, temperature rating, overcurrent protection, terminations, flexible-cable requirements, and manufacturer instructions before installation.

Entity Definitions

A wire harness is an organized group of conductors and terminations routed through equipment. Cable assembly refers to one finished interconnect cable prepared for a specific use. Battery and inverter systems often contain both: a larger harness plus dedicated high-current cable assemblies.

Comparison Table

Battery sizing checkWhy it mattersTypical result
System voltageLow voltage magnifies dropUpsizing happens quickly
Round-trip pathCurrent returns through the circuitMore total resistance than expected
Termination qualityLugs can add heatConnection fails before the cable
Assembly styleHarness and cable use differRouting and service strategy changes

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does 12V sizing grow so quickly?

Because a small voltage loss is already a large percentage of total system voltage, so the allowable resistance budget is tight.

A wire harness is different from a battery cable assembly how?

A harness manages multiple branches and devices, while a battery cable assembly is usually one high-current path between known connection points.

Why does crimp quality matter so much?

At battery current levels, poor crimps add meaningful resistance and heat, often making the termination the first failure point.

Why keep references on a battery tool page?

They clarify conductor, harness, and termination terminology for users working across electrical, automotive, and manufacturing contexts.

What should be checked after the calculator answer?

Check fuse coordination, terminal ratings, connector geometry, flex requirements, and the real route before approving the cable.

Authoritative Sources

Reviewed by Hommer Zhao, General Manager and Wire Harness Engineer, affiliated with WIRINGO.