I just had this "debate" with a reader of one of my articles who was a ham 
radio operator and a do-it-yourself solar homeowner who insisted stranded wire 
had a substantial lower resistance than solid wire for DC wiring.  After lots 
of research I discovered he was getting this from his ham radio text books.  It 
seems for antenna and speaker wire applications, as you increase the frequency 
of a current flow, the current starts to move out onto the surface of the wire, 
so the more strands of wire you have, the lower the resistance AT HIGHER 
FREQUENCIES.   

I learned that below 0.1 Mhz, this higher voltage loss does not come into play 
since DC electricity has a frequency of 0.0.  I think there is basically no 
differnce for a given current and voltage using stranded or solid wire for DC 
appications.  However, when you have long runs of DC wire (like to a large 
ground mounted array), if you allow the + and - wire to not be banded together 
in the trench, you will create a long narrow "capacitor" which can induce all 
kinds of resistance to power flow, not to mention reek havoc on nearby radios, 
and this may be more of a problem with DC than AC. 

I think many of these do-it-yourself types don't realize when they are wiring 
up some 12 volt DC solar equipment that the current for the same 120 VAC load 
will now be 10 times higher at 12 volts DC, and this is causing them to think 
the wire has a higher resistance when running DC through it and do not 
understand how the current drastically increases at the lower voltage and any 
long wire run will have a major voltage drop at low voltage.

Jeff Yago

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