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#137694 07/24/03 11:44 AM
Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 1,498
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C
C-H Offline OP
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Why is there a 0.75 mm² size?

The other sizes are logical enough:

1.0 , 1.5 , 2.5 , 4.0, 6.0, 10, 16, 25.....

Each size is about 60% larger than the previous. It is just a mathematical series rounded off. The same series is used for fuse sizes and a lot of other things. (10, 13, 16, 20, 25, 32, 40, 50, 63, 80, 100A)

There shouldn't be a 0.75 mm² size: To fit the series it should either be 0.6 mm² or 1.0 mm².

Why not just drop it?

[This message has been edited by C-H (edited 07-25-2003).]

#137695 07/24/03 05:55 PM
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 1,253
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djk Offline
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It's a proud tradition no doubt and thus can never be dropped!

#137696 07/25/03 01:47 AM
Joined: Jul 2002
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C-H,
I've often wondered that myself.
Over here, we have 0.5mm too, but only in flexible cable sizes.
Also, a 50A fuse is a common size, here too, for mid-size 3 phase installations, where the tariff is based on the size of fusing. [Linked Image]

#137697 07/25/03 05:53 AM
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I understand that 0.75 sq. mm is the smallest size line cord used in Continental Europe.

We have 0.5 sq. mm in the U.K. as well, often found on bedside lamps and other very low power apppliances.

On the fuse sizes, all the old British standard ratings were pretty much round numbers: 5, 15, 20, 30, 60A etc., the main exception being the BS1362 fuses for our 13A plug, of course.

The odd sizes of 6, 16, 32, 63 and so on only appeared in coimparatively recent years with the adoption of European standards.

#137698 07/25/03 10:14 AM
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 2,498
T
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0.5mm2 is used mostly for LV stuff here and not available at hardware stores. 2x0.75mm2 zip cord is available everywhere but hardly ever used for appliances (usually speaker wire or botched repairs). I've seen old lamps with 0,5mm2 zip cord though. And I've seen the odd scary installation with 0.5mm2 buried in plaster, spliced into a normal 10A circuit, feeding a receptacle. AAARGH!

#137699 07/25/03 04:15 PM
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C-H Offline OP
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Pauluk,
Quote

On the fuse sizes, all the old British standard ratings were pretty much round numbers: 5, 15, 20, 30, 60A etc. [...]

The odd sizes of 6, 16, 32, 63 and so on only appeared in coimparatively recent years with the adoption of European standards.

If you free your mind from our decimal system for a second you will see that the latter numbers are less odd than the former. [Linked Image]

Let me tell a little bedtime story for engineers:

(Read the AWG story in the AWG thread too, it shows how the Americans tackled the problem with wire sizes.)

Back in the 1870's the French military engineer Charles Reynard was given the job of improving military balloons. He discovered that 425 different sizes of cable were being used to moor the balloons, a logistical nightmare, and set about determining how best to reduce these to a smaller number of sizes.

Reynard succeeded in replacing the 425 sizes with 17 sizes that covered the same range. To do this he made the sizes a geometric series in which by every fifth step the mass per unit length of the cable increased by a factor of ten:

10^(0/5) = 1
10^(1/5) = 1.5848
10^(2/5) = 2.5119
10^(3/5) = 3.9811
10^(4/5) = 6.3096
10^(5/5) = 10

To users of a decimally-oriented system of units, such as SI, Reynard's series is much more useful than these other geometric series, because it begins on 10 and ends on 100. The ISO adopted Reynard's series as the basis of the preferred numbers for use in setting metric sizes. The designations of the series they have defined begin with R as a tribute to Reynard, and the series are called Reynard series.

R5: 10, 16, 25, 40, 63, 100.

R10: 10, 12.5, 16, 20, 25, 31.5, 40, 50, 63, 80, 100.

Rounded series are also defined; they are indicated by a prime mark following the R.

R'10: 10, 12.5, 16, 20, 25, 32, 40, 50, 63, 80, 100.

Interestingly, someone decided to round off 12.5 upwards to 13 when it came to fuse sizes, despite the fact that ISO rounds it to 12.

Are you sleeping now?

[This message has been edited by C-H (edited 07-25-2003).]

#137700 07/28/03 06:51 AM
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 7,520
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Not asleep yet! [Linked Image]

It's actually quite interesting -- I'd not stopped to really think about the geometric progression of the series before. On the fuse sizes, we have an oddball size of 3.15A which is quite commonly specified in electronics work.

There are also similar related series such as for standard resistor values, e.g. for many years the preferred values for most applications were:

10, 12, 15, 18, 22, 27, 33, 39, 47, 56, 68, 82, 100

plus their related decades, each being approx. 20% greater than the value before to tie in with the 20% tolerance of the components.


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