Wire Run & Voltage Drop Electrical

A long home run costs copper resistance, and what that resistance does depends entirely on the signal riding it. Pick the signal type, the gauge, and the one-way length — the verdict speaks that signal’s language: loop supply margin for 4-20 mA, real-versus-imagined error on 0-10 V, and degrees of lie on a temperature sensor.

The transmitter minimum is on its datasheet — 12 V is a common floor for 2-wire transmitters. The sense resistance is what the AI burns to read the current; 250 Ω (1–5 V) is typical, some inputs use 100 Ω.

Round-trip wire resistance
Voltage at transmitter, 20 mA worst case
Max one-way run at this gauge
Enter the run to see the verdict.

A loop-powered pressure transducer sits 500 ft from the panel on 18 AWG, fed from 24 VDC through a 250 Ω sense resistor.

  1. Round-trip copper: R = 2 × 500 × 6.385 ÷ 1000 = 6.4 Ω.
  2. Worst case is full-scale, 20 mA: drop = 0.020 × (6.4 + 250) = 5.1 V.
  3. At the transmitter: 24 − 5.1 = 18.9 V — comfortably above the 12 V floor.

That margin is why 4-20 mA owns long runs: current is the signal, so copper resistance costs supply headroom instead of accuracy, and there’s thousands of feet of headroom to spend.

AWGΩ per 1000 ft (one conductor)Ω per 100 ft round trip
142.5250.51
164.0160.80
186.3851.28
2010.152.03
2216.143.23

Solid copper at 25 °C, per NEC Chapter 9 Table 8. This tool is US-native (AWG, Ω/1000 ft) — a metric mm² / Ω-per-km option is a tracked follow-up. Copper runs ~0.4 %/°C hotter-is-more, so a ceiling-plenum run in summer reads a touch higher than the table.

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