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Thickness of Ground Wire?

Printed From: the12volt.com
Forum Name: Lights, Neon, LEDs, HIDs
Forum Discription: Under Car Lighting, Strobe Lights, Fog Lights, Headlights, HIDs, DRL, Tail Lights, Brake Lights, Dashboard Lights, WigWag, etc.
URL: https://www.the12volt.com/installbay/forum_posts.asp?tid=144276
Printed Date: April 26, 2024 at 12:46 PM


Topic: Thickness of Ground Wire?

Posted By: euph111
Subject: Thickness of Ground Wire?
Date Posted: March 30, 2018 at 11:41 AM

posted_image

I am installing a traffic backer (it alternates the brake lights and the back up lights) on my car.
Instructions recommend I use a 16 gauge for the positive (white) wire and it be connected to a switch.

Two questions:
1. Would it be OK if I just have it ALWAYS connected to power and instead connect the ground to a switch?
2. Can I use a thinner wire for the ground or does it also have to be 16 gauge?

Thank you



Replies:

Posted By: eguru
Date Posted: March 30, 2018 at 8:30 PM
1. No, not a good idea.
2. The ground can be a smaller gauge as it only has to handle the current required by the controller itself - not all the loads. 20 or 22ga would be fine.




Posted By: sparkie
Date Posted: March 31, 2018 at 8:13 AM
The switch is required to prevent a constant draw on the power source which would drain the battery. The ground wire should be the same gauge of the input power wire. The schematic does not indicate the fuse rating on the circuit. The ground wire must be the correct gauge for the current load of the circuit. Generally speaking unless the ground wire is for relays which don't consume current, then always match the gauge of the ground wire to the power wire. If the wire must be extended, then use a lower gauge (thicker) wire to reduce voltage drop.

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sparky




Posted By: eguru
Date Posted: March 31, 2018 at 9:10 AM
sparkie wrote:

The switch is required to prevent a constant draw on the power source which would drain the battery. The ground wire should be the same gauge of the input power wire. The schematic does not indicate the fuse rating on the circuit. The ground wire must be the correct gauge for the current load of the circuit. Generally speaking unless the ground wire is for relays which don't consume current, then always match the gauge of the ground wire to the power wire. If the wire must be extended, then use a lower gauge (thicker) wire to reduce voltage drop.

Making the ground conductor the same size as the feed conductor is necessary if all the current supplied to the loads must pass through one ground conductor. That is not the case here as the loads all have their own grounding conductors. The only current flowing through the dedicated ground wire from the controller is the current consumed by the controller's electronics.




Posted By: euph111
Date Posted: March 31, 2018 at 9:53 AM
Thank you everyone, I'll keep the positive wire switched and use the same gauge wire for the negative as for the positive.





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