Let’s break it down. Electricity flowing through a cable generates heat. The smaller the cable, the more resistance and heat it produces. The goal is to choose a cable large enough to carry the required current without exceeding its temperature rating.

If your 5A fridge runs through a hot attic (0.87) and is bundled with 4 other cables (0.80): ( 5 / (0.87 \times 0.80) = 5 / 0.696 = 7.2A )

A 2000W water heater on 230V. ( I = 2000 / 230 = 8.7 \text Amps ) Step 2: Determine the Round-Trip Cable Length Many forget this. If your device is 20 meters from the source, the actual electrical path is 40 meters (go and return).