- Mar 11, 2000
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I have a EV car charger but I must use an extension cord with it because my car charger's length is a few feet too short for convenient use.
So I bought a 10 m or 32 feet 12 AWG extension cord for it.
According to this calculator...
http://buyextensioncord.com/info_voltage_drop.shtml
...I would lose about 1.5% of the voltage over that 32 feet. Assuming the amperage is about 11.6 A, that works out to about 21 Watts over the length of the cord. Is that correct?
The reason I ask is because I only need about 20 feet, so the extra 12 -15 feet gets gathered loosely into one spot. It's not tightly coiled and its hung outside so there is good ventilation, but nonetheless I have about 12 -15 feet of cable sitting in the same spot generating about (I calculate) 10 Watts of heat. I've touched the cable after drawing that nearly 12 amps charging my car, and that cord wasn't even warm. But that was in 5C weather.
Are my calculations accurate? Also, 12 AWG stranded copper is supposed to have an impedance of about 1.65 Ohms per 1000 feet.
So I bought a 10 m or 32 feet 12 AWG extension cord for it.
According to this calculator...
http://buyextensioncord.com/info_voltage_drop.shtml
...I would lose about 1.5% of the voltage over that 32 feet. Assuming the amperage is about 11.6 A, that works out to about 21 Watts over the length of the cord. Is that correct?
The reason I ask is because I only need about 20 feet, so the extra 12 -15 feet gets gathered loosely into one spot. It's not tightly coiled and its hung outside so there is good ventilation, but nonetheless I have about 12 -15 feet of cable sitting in the same spot generating about (I calculate) 10 Watts of heat. I've touched the cable after drawing that nearly 12 amps charging my car, and that cord wasn't even warm. But that was in 5C weather.
Are my calculations accurate? Also, 12 AWG stranded copper is supposed to have an impedance of about 1.65 Ohms per 1000 feet.
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