Residential? The NEC Appies ALL Electrical Installations, Internationally Recognized
Just remember that not all codes and best practices for residential electric translate to an RV. E.g. stranded vs solid copper wiring. Goes for either a diy job or if you hire a residential electrician
Remember.....
Remember what?
You didn't provide any new info or remind us of any facts.
Let's let everyone know
why electricity flows on one wire type, better than the other. (Everywhere in Earth, vehicles are no exception.)
AC current flows across the surface of the wire's diameter. Only the core contains the resistance.
DC current flows homogenously across each of the stranded wire's diameters.
One wire type does not fit both applications.
DC - Stranded
AC - Solid
Read about Skin Effect, Proximity Effect & Lorentz Force, here:
The difference between AC and DC resistance of a conductor
Do the math. Then testify as to what
you witnessed.
Rac=Rdc[1+αs+αp]
Rac = The ac resistance of the conductor
Rdc = The dc resistance of the conductor
αs,αp = Skin effect and Proximity effect factor
Being inside of a vehicle is not relevant, other than vehicles have DC batteries instead of 300 mile AC extension cords.
Quality brake & fuel lines are solid, hollow even. A mechanical DT vibrates more than the entire vehicle. Lots of solid (hollow) Copper lines, vibrating with the same frequency as the motor. All of my stranded plug wires vibrate to a different pattern & I replace them every two years.
(Anecdotal evidence sucks, right)
Math, Science, Fact