Key Takeaways (Executive Summary)
- The Inverse Rule: AWG works backwards. A smaller number means a thicker wire (e.g., 10 AWG is thick, 30 AWG is thin).
- Ampacity: The gauge determines how much current (Amps) the wire can carry before it melts. Undersizing wire creates a fire hazard.
- Stranded is Standard: Custom wire harnesses almost always use stranded wire (flexible) rather than solid core (rigid), which affects how the gauge is calculated.
- Distance Matters: For long runs, you may need to "upsize" the wire gauge to prevent Voltage Drop.
- AWG↔mm² Conversion: AWG measures conductor diameter; mm² measures cross-sectional area. There is no clean conversion — 18 AWG ≈ 0.823 mm², closest IEC 60228 metric standard is 1.0 mm².
Why Size Matters: It’s About Safety
When designing a custom cable assembly and wire harness, picking the connector is the easy part. Picking the right wire gauge is where the math happens.
AWG (American Wire Gauge) is the standardized system used in North America to define the diameter of electrically conducting wire.
If you choose a wire that is too thin (too high of a gauge) for the electrical load, the wire acts like a resistor. It heats up. At best, you get "Voltage Drop" (your 12V sensor only gets 10V). At worst, the insulation melts and starts a fire.
The Rule of Thumb: Higher Number = Thinner Wire
It is counter-intuitive, but the system is based on the manufacturing process. The "Gauge" number originally represented how many times the raw copper had to be pulled (drawn) through a die to get it to that size.
- 0 AWG (1/0): Drawn zero times. Very thick.
- 24 AWG: Drawn 24 times. Very thin.
Need a Non-Standard AWG or Custom-Stranded Conductor?
AWG Current Carrying Capacity Chart (Ampacity)
Use this table as a baseline guideline. Values for hookup wire gauges (8 to 30 AWG) reference UL 1007/UL 1015 style at 30°C ambient, single conductor in free air. Values for power cable gauges (4 AWG and larger) reference NEC 310.16 (75°C insulation, free air rating). Always verify against the specific UL Style sheet and apply ambient temperature derating for your application.
| AWG Size | Diameter (mm) | Area (mm²) | Max Amps (Chassis Wiring) | Max Amps (Power Transmission) | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4/0 AWG | 11.68 mm | 107 mm² | 380 A | 230 A | EV powertrain main, large UPS, battery banks |
| 2/0 AWG | 9.27 mm | 67.4 mm² | 283 A | 175 A | Welding cable, generator interconnect |
| 1/0 AWG | 8.25 mm | 53.5 mm² | 245 A | 150 A | Heavy industrial motors, large inverters |
| 2 AWG | 6.54 mm | 33.6 mm² | 181 A | 95 A | Service entrance, large equipment feeders |
| 4 AWG | 5.19 mm | 21.2 mm² | 135 A | 70 A | EV charging cables, large appliance circuits |
| 6 AWG | 4.11 mm | 13.3 mm² | 101 A | 55 A | Range circuits, large HVAC equipment |
| 8 AWG | 3.26 mm | 8.37 mm² | 73 A | 24 A | Battery cables, high-power harnesses |
| 10 AWG | 2.59 mm | 5.26 mm² | 55 A | 15 A | Large motors, inverters |
| 12 AWG | 2.05 mm | 3.31 mm² | 41 A | 9.3 A | Household mains, power tools |
| 14 AWG | 1.63 mm | 2.08 mm² | 32 A | 5.9 A | Lighting, solenoids |
| 16 AWG | 1.29 mm | 1.31 mm² | 22 A | 3.7 A | Automotive controls, sensors |
| 18 AWG | 1.02 mm | 0.823 mm² | 16 A | 2.3 A | General purpose low voltage |
| 20 AWG | 0.81 mm | 0.519 mm² | 11 A | 1.5 A | LED lighting, signal wiring |
| 22 AWG | 0.64 mm | 0.324 mm² | 7 A | 0.9 A | Data signals, USB power |
| 24 AWG | 0.51 mm | 0.205 mm² | 3.5 A | 0.6 A | Ethernet, telephone, micro-electronics |
| 26 AWG | 0.40 mm | 0.129 mm² | 2.2 A | 0.36 A | Fine-pitch consumer electronics, micro-coax |
| 28 AWG | 0.32 mm | 0.0810 mm² | 1.4 A | 0.24 A | Ribbon cable, USB internal, medical sensors |
| 30 AWG | 0.255 mm | 0.0509 mm² | 0.86 A | 0.14 A | Wire-wrap, fine PCB jumpers, micro-medical |
Note: "Chassis Wiring" assumes short runs in free air at 30°C. "Power Transmission" is a conservative rating for bundled wires or in-conduit installation. Always verify the insulation temperature rating (e.g., 80°C UL 1007 vs. 105°C UL 1015) for your specific application.
Stranded vs. Solid Core: Selection by Application
Solid copper is one rigid wire; stranded copper is dozens of fine strands twisted together to give the same conductive cross-section with vastly more flexibility. The right choice depends on whether the cable will move, vibrate, or stay fixed for the life of the install.
| Application | Recommended | Why |
|---|---|---|
| PCB-to-PCB jumpers, IDC connectors | Solid | Holds shape in displacement contacts; routes cleanly through hole-mount terminals |
| Building wire (Romex, in-wall installs) | Solid | Static install, lower cost, terminates cleanly into screw clamps |
| Panel and control wiring (low vibration) | Stranded | Tolerates installation flex without work-hardening |
| Automotive harnesses | Stranded | Continuous vibration; solid copper fractures within months under engine-bay conditions |
| Robotics, drag-chain, continuous-flex | Stranded (high-flex) | Fine-strand construction (Class M, 19+ strands) survives millions of bend cycles |
| Battery and welding cables | Stranded (Class K/M) | Frequent flexing under high current; ultra-fine strands prevent breakage |
| Appliance internal wiring (UL 1007) | Stranded | Internal flex during assembly and service; stranded survives factory handling |
How stranded AWG is measured: A "24 AWG stranded" wire is not one 24-gauge strand. It is typically 7 strands of 32 AWG (notation: 7/32) twisted together. The combined cross-sectional copper area equals that of a solid 24 AWG wire. For high-flex applications, the same 24 AWG might use a finer-strand construction like 19/36 or 41/40, trading manufacturing cost for dramatically improved cycle life.
Voltage Drop: AWG Selection by Distance and Voltage
Just because a wire can carry the rated current doesn't mean it should be used at any distance. All conductors have inherent resistance, and that resistance compounds with length. The longer the run, the more voltage gets lost as heat — even when the wire's ampacity rating looks fine on paper.
The standard formula for DC voltage drop:
V_drop = (2 × L × R × I) / 1000
- L = one-way length of the cable in feet
- R = conductor resistance in ohms per 1000 ft
- I = load current in amps
- The factor of 2 accounts for the round-trip distance (positive supply + ground return)
Worked Example: 12V Automotive Auxiliary Load
In a 12V automotive cable assembly, a 5-amp accessory at 25 feet from the battery, using 18 AWG wire (resistance ≈ 6.4 Ω/1000 ft):
V_drop = (2 × 25 × 6.4 × 5) / 1000 = 1.6V
That's 13.3% of the 12V supply — well past the 3% threshold for sensitive electronics, and outside even the 5% tolerance acceptable for resistive loads. Specifying 10 AWG instead (≈ 1.0 Ω/1000 ft) drops the loss to 0.25V (2.1%), bringing the circuit safely within tolerance.
Voltage Drop Lookup: Minimum AWG by Voltage, Current, and Distance
The table below shows the minimum AWG required to keep voltage drop at or below 3% across common 12V automotive, 24V industrial, and 48V telecom/data-center systems. On the 24V side, that drop budget is what sizes the conductors in a typical I/O and control cable assembly.
| Load Current | One-Way Run | Min AWG @ 12V | Min AWG @ 24V | Min AWG @ 48V |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 A | 10 ft (3 m) | 22 AWG | 24 AWG | 26 AWG |
| 1 A | 25 ft (7.6 m) | 18 AWG | 20 AWG | 24 AWG |
| 1 A | 50 ft (15 m) | 14 AWG | 18 AWG | 20 AWG |
| 5 A | 10 ft (3 m) | 14 AWG | 18 AWG | 20 AWG |
| 5 A | 25 ft (7.6 m) | 10 AWG | 14 AWG | 16 AWG |
| 5 A | 50 ft (15 m) | 8 AWG | 10 AWG | 14 AWG |
| 10 A | 10 ft (3 m) | 12 AWG | 14 AWG | 18 AWG |
| 10 A | 25 ft (7.6 m) | 8 AWG | 10 AWG | 14 AWG |
| 10 A | 50 ft (15 m) | 4 AWG | 8 AWG | 10 AWG |
| 20 A | 10 ft (3 m) | 8 AWG | 12 AWG | 14 AWG |
Higher-voltage systems tolerate the same wattage loss at smaller AWG because the percentage drop is what matters, not the absolute voltage drop. This is why 48V architectures (PoE, telecom, data center) have become standard for long runs — a given AWG carries roughly 4× the equivalent 12V distance at the same drop percentage.
For deeper coverage of 24V industrial design (PLCs, sensors, IPC-620 Class 3 builds), see our Engineer's Guide to 24V DC Voltage Drop.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q: What is the most common wire gauge for custom harnesses? A: 18 AWG to 22 AWG is the "sweet spot" for most industrial controls and sensors. It balances flexibility, current capacity, and physical strength.
Q: How do I convert Metric (mm²) to AWG? A: Europe uses square millimeters (mm²).
- 0.50 mm² ≈ 20 AWG
- 0.75 mm² ≈ 18 AWG
- 1.50 mm² ≈ 16 AWG
Q: Does insulation affect the gauge? A: No. AWG measures the conductor (copper) only. A 20 AWG wire with thick silicone insulation will look much fatter than a 20 AWG wire with thin Teflon insulation, but they carry the same current.