โAug-24-2015 02:25 PM
โAug-30-2015 12:54 PM
โAug-29-2015 09:38 AM
dapperdan wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:avvidclif1 wrote:
It's partially the jacket but mostly the wire itself. A single strand of #6 wire is hard to bend. A multiple strand wire is easier to bend. The more strands there are in that make up the 6ga conductor the more flexible it is.
For example 6ga superflex welding cable has 266 strands. A listing on Ebay showed a 6/4 cable with each wire having 133 strands. It would be stiffer than the welding cable.
Understanding SO Cord Designations
What do all SO Cord letter designations stand for? See the table below for a simple breakdown.
Designation What this means
S Service grade. Extra hard service when not followed by J, P, or V.
J Hard service
V Vacuum cleaner cord and light duty cable.
P Parallel cord (also known as zip cord). Light duty only.
E Thermoplastic Elastomer (UL/NEC designation only)
O Oil resistant*
T Thermoplastic
W Outdoor. Sunlight-resistant jacket, wet location rated conductors. Formerly "W-A".
H Heater cable
VW-1 Flame retardant
FT2 Flame retardant
* When one "O" is in a designation (for example, "SJOW"), only the outer jacket material is oil resistant. If there are two "O's" are in the classification (such as "SOOW"), both the outer jacket and conductor insulation are oil resistant.
Thanks!
Good info.
Ron,
I just looked up my old invoice for the cable I bought. It was 6-4/C SOOW
(Black) from Wire and Cable To Go. It's super flexible and I paid about $110 for 35 feet of it. I bought the ends off of Amazon but I can't remember what those cost.
Hope this helps ya a bit.
Dan
โAug-29-2015 04:19 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:avvidclif1 wrote:
It's partially the jacket but mostly the wire itself. A single strand of #6 wire is hard to bend. A multiple strand wire is easier to bend. The more strands there are in that make up the 6ga conductor the more flexible it is.
For example 6ga superflex welding cable has 266 strands. A listing on Ebay showed a 6/4 cable with each wire having 133 strands. It would be stiffer than the welding cable.
Understanding SO Cord Designations
What do all SO Cord letter designations stand for? See the table below for a simple breakdown.
Designation What this means
S Service grade. Extra hard service when not followed by J, P, or V.
J Hard service
V Vacuum cleaner cord and light duty cable.
P Parallel cord (also known as zip cord). Light duty only.
E Thermoplastic Elastomer (UL/NEC designation only)
O Oil resistant*
T Thermoplastic
W Outdoor. Sunlight-resistant jacket, wet location rated conductors. Formerly "W-A".
H Heater cable
VW-1 Flame retardant
FT2 Flame retardant
* When one "O" is in a designation (for example, "SJOW"), only the outer jacket material is oil resistant. If there are two "O's" are in the classification (such as "SOOW"), both the outer jacket and conductor insulation are oil resistant.
Thanks!
Good info.
โAug-28-2015 02:34 PM
avvidclif1 wrote:
It's partially the jacket but mostly the wire itself. A single strand of #6 wire is hard to bend. A multiple strand wire is easier to bend. The more strands there are in that make up the 6ga conductor the more flexible it is.
For example 6ga superflex welding cable has 266 strands. A listing on Ebay showed a 6/4 cable with each wire having 133 strands. It would be stiffer than the welding cable.
Understanding SO Cord Designations
What do all SO Cord letter designations stand for? See the table below for a simple breakdown.
Designation What this means
S Service grade. Extra hard service when not followed by J, P, or V.
J Hard service
V Vacuum cleaner cord and light duty cable.
P Parallel cord (also known as zip cord). Light duty only.
E Thermoplastic Elastomer (UL/NEC designation only)
O Oil resistant*
T Thermoplastic
W Outdoor. Sunlight-resistant jacket, wet location rated conductors. Formerly "W-A".
H Heater cable
VW-1 Flame retardant
FT2 Flame retardant
* When one "O" is in a designation (for example, "SJOW"), only the outer jacket material is oil resistant. If there are two "O's" are in the classification (such as "SOOW"), both the outer jacket and conductor insulation are oil resistant.
โAug-28-2015 10:26 AM
โAug-28-2015 07:28 AM
RedRam wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:RedRam wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:RedRam wrote:
* Update*
I found another site that has the same wiring and it states 6/3-8/1 so i'm thinking this is correct.Maybe whoever wrote the other specs must have put in a 1 without thinking.
That is correct!
Seriously it's a easy DIY job. The biggest problem is finding the cable for a decent price.
I found a new 36' 50 Amp RV Extension Cord that has a right angle 50 amp-125/250V plug and connector with handle.The cord plus shipping is $126.57. Then cut the end off and buy a ParkPower 50 Amp Female Connector, $76.19 and put it on the 50A power cord so it will hook up to my RV and I have myself a pliable 50A power cord. Does that sound like a fair price ?.
Sorry I am not 100% understanding what you are saying. My question is how you know the cord is "pliable" ?
It has a -40ยฐ cold weather jacket but maybe it's still the older and hard to coil when cold just like what I have now. But with the -40 cold weather jacket I was hoping it was the limber cord.
โAug-28-2015 06:34 AM
โAug-28-2015 06:08 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:RedRam wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:RedRam wrote:
* Update*
I found another site that has the same wiring and it states 6/3-8/1 so i'm thinking this is correct.Maybe whoever wrote the other specs must have put in a 1 without thinking.
That is correct!
Seriously it's a easy DIY job. The biggest problem is finding the cable for a decent price.
I found a new 36' 50 Amp RV Extension Cord that has a right angle 50 amp-125/250V plug and connector with handle.The cord plus shipping is $126.57. Then cut the end off and buy a ParkPower 50 Amp Female Connector, $76.19 and put it on the 50A power cord so it will hook up to my RV and I have myself a pliable 50A power cord. Does that sound like a fair price ?.
Sorry I am not 100% understanding what you are saying. My question is how you know the cord is "pliable" ?
โAug-27-2015 10:49 PM
RedRam wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:RedRam wrote:
* Update*
I found another site that has the same wiring and it states 6/3-8/1 so i'm thinking this is correct.Maybe whoever wrote the other specs must have put in a 1 without thinking.
That is correct!
Seriously it's a easy DIY job. The biggest problem is finding the cable for a decent price.
I found a new 36' 50 Amp RV Extension Cord that has a right angle 50 amp-125/250V plug and connector with handle.The cord plus shipping is $126.57. Then cut the end off and buy a ParkPower 50 Amp Female Connector, $76.19 and put it on the 50A power cord so it will hook up to my RV and I have myself a pliable 50A power cord. Does that sound like a fair price ?.
โAug-27-2015 10:09 PM
john&bet wrote:In the back of the truck and put a cable lock around it if im boondocking
In the bed of my truck.
โAug-27-2015 07:00 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:RedRam wrote:
* Update*
I found another site that has the same wiring and it states 6/3-8/1 so i'm thinking this is correct.Maybe whoever wrote the other specs must have put in a 1 without thinking.
That is correct!
Seriously it's a easy DIY job. The biggest problem is finding the cable for a decent price.
โAug-27-2015 05:04 PM
ependydad wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
Been thinking of buying the cord in 100' spools and making people cords to the length they want and selling them in the Campgrounds for something to do.ependydad wrote:
I'd likely be interested if you ever did this.
You would have to come camp where I would be, the shipping would make it a bad deal.
You're on the road; I'm on the road. Let's coordinate. ๐
โAug-27-2015 02:54 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
Been thinking of buying the cord in 100' spools and making people cords to the length they want and selling them in the Campgrounds for something to do.ependydad wrote:
I'd likely be interested if you ever did this.
You would have to come camp where I would be, the shipping would make it a bad deal.
โAug-27-2015 08:48 AM
Coach-man wrote:
I never said it was, I said close, some old phone cable used 18 gauge wire! And IMHO it is not really off topic, if anyone were to use 16 gauge wire for a 50 amp cord, it would be a real problem.