Avionics Wire Gauge Converter: AWG to mm2, Diameter, Circular Mils
Convert aerospace wire sizes instantly between AWG, cross-sectional area, diameter, and circular mils under FAA AC 43.13-1B guidelines.
AVIONICS WIRE GAUGE CONVERTER
Converted Specification Matrix
How to Convert Avionics Wire Gauge Sizes
Avionics installations, instrument upgrades, and electrical repairs require exact wire sizing to handle current loads without causing dangerous voltage drops or fire hazards. This converter processes calculations across the five primary metrics used in aviation maintenance engineering:
- American Wire Gauge (AWG): The primary wire sizing system used in North American aviation. Smaller AWG numbers represent thicker conductors with greater current capacity.
- Cross Section Area (mm²): The metric measurement of a wire’s conductive core surface area, common in international aircraft wiring diagrams and European modifications.
- Wire Diameter (mm / inches): The physical thickness of the bare conductor core before insulation or shielding is applied.
- Circular Mil Area (CM): An electrical area measurement defined as the square of the wire diameter in thousandths of an inch (mils). The FAA utilizes circular mils as the absolute baseline for determining safe continuous current capacities.
Operational Range Limit: This converter tool is optimized for aerospace electrical systems and restricts inputs to standard aircraft wiring sizes between 0 AWG and 36 AWG.
Stranded Aviation Wire vs. Geometric Calculation
A critical safety detail for technicians to consider when using this tool:
Important Maintenance Note: FAA AC 43.13-1B strictly mandates the use of stranded conductors (typically 19 strands for standard airframe sizes) to withstand structural flight vibrations. This tool calculates the exact solid-core geometric equivalent. Real-world mil-spec wire (such as SAE AS22759/Tefzel) features tiny air gaps between its strands, meaning its actual outer diameter will measure slightly larger than the raw geometric values generated here. Always consult the specific manufacturer’s wire specification sheet for final conduit routing clearances.
Aerospace Wiring Applications & FAA Compliance
Sizing wire bundles requires strict adherence to FAA Advisory Circular AC 43.13-1B Chapter 11. Selecting an inadequate gauge causes line resistance heat to accumulate in closed airframe conduits.
| Wire Gauge (AWG) | Typical Aviation Application | Operational Context (AC 43.13-1B Guidance) |
| AWG 22 to 24 | Data Links & Low-Current Signals | Standard for digital avionics buses (ARINC 429), GPS antenna lines, glass cockpit sensors, and audio systems. Note: AWG 24 is generally the absolute minimum size allowed for airframe structural wiring. |
| AWG 16 to 20 | Lighting Circuits & Avionics Mains | Utilized for primary cockpit instrument power leads, landing/taxi lights, fuel pump controls, and cabin blower fans. |
| AWG 10 to 14 | High-Load Equipment Systems | Dedicated power delivery paths for pitot-static heaters, hydraulic actuators, de-icing boots, and main alternator outputs. |
| AWG 0 to 4 | Engine Starters & Primary Battery Mains | Heavy-duty master power cables linking the main battery, external power receptacles, starter relays, and starter motors. |
Complete Plain-Text Sizing Formulas
The American Wire Gauge standard relies on a fixed geometric ratio where 36 AWG is defined as exactly 0.005 inches in diameter, and 0000 AWG is defined as exactly 0.460 inches.
To run manual calculations without a calculator terminal, apply these plain-text math paths (where pi is calculated as 3.14159265):
Calculating Sizing Parameters from a Known AWG Number
- Wire Diameter in Inches: Diameter (inches) = 0.005 * (92^((36 – AWG) / 39))
- Wire Diameter in Millimeters: Diameter (mm) = Diameter (inches) * 25.4
- Cross-Sectional Area: Area (mm²) = (pi / 4) * (Diameter (mm) * Diameter (mm))
- Circular Mil Area: Circular Mils (CM) = (Diameter (inches) * 1000) * (Diameter (inches) * 1000)
Calculating AWG from Physical Dimensions
- AWG from Inch Diameter: AWG = 36 – 39 * (log(Diameter (inches) / 0.005) / log(92))
- AWG from Millimeter Diameter: Convert mm to inches (
Diameter (mm) / 25.4), then solve the Inch Diameter equation above. - AWG from Cross-Sectional Area: Diameter (mm) = Square Root((4 * Area (mm²)) / pi), convert to inches, then solve for AWG.
Wire Gauge Quick Reference Index
This index outlines standard aerospace bare conductor conversions from 0 AWG down to the minimum permitted airframe signal size of 24 AWG, rounded to 4 decimal places:
| AWG Size | Cross Section Area (mm²) | Wire Diameter (mm) | Wire Diameter (inches) | Circular Mil Area (CM) |
| 0 AWG | 53.4831 mm² | 8.2515 mm | 0.3249 in | 105,534 CM |
| 4 AWG | 21.1506 mm² | 5.1894 mm | 0.2043 in | 41,742 CM |
| 10 AWG | 5.2612 mm² | 2.5882 mm | 0.1019 in | 10,381 CM |
| 12 AWG | 3.3088 mm² | 2.0525 mm | 0.0808 in | 6,530 CM |
| 14 AWG | 2.0809 mm² | 1.6277 mm | 0.0641 in | 4,107 CM |
| 16 AWG | 1.3087 mm² | 1.2908 mm | 0.0508 in | 2,583 CM |
| 18 AWG | 0.8229 mm² | 1.0237 mm | 0.0403 in | 1,624 CM |
| 20 AWG | 0.5176 mm² | 0.8118 mm | 0.0320 in | 1,022 CM |
| 22 AWG | 0.3255 mm² | 0.6438 mm | 0.0253 in | 642 CM |
| 24 AWG | 0.2047 mm² | 0.5106 mm | 0.0201 in | 404 CM |
