- 100 FT
- Red tough jackets resistant to abrasion
- Power cable
- 4 gauge
Buy Raptor BC4R-100 4 Gauge 100-Feet Battery Cable (Red) Now
This product is great for the price others may say it's cheap or not the exact gauge or by two. I needed around 6 gauge and I ordered 4 so now it works perfectly for what I needed and 6 TIMES cheaper of the price I would of had to pay.Read Best Reviews of Raptor BC4R-100 4 Gauge 100-Feet Battery Cable (Red) Here
great cable i used it all and it works perfectly for averything i needed it. i use it for a lift on my truck actually 3 of them then to power two gas air compressors.Want Raptor BC4R-100 4 Gauge 100-Feet Battery Cable (Red) Discount?
Flexable, good quality, I was satisfied with the purchase. I'd buy this product again.UPDATE 2/05/12 Amazon is allowing me to return all six reels I bought with them paying postage, even though I bought them nearly a year ago. I have no need for spools of fake copper wire made out of 95% aluminum.UPDATE 2/03/12 just today I became aware of the review by Kyle A. Stein, to see it click on the reviews of the black color of this same wire, BC4B-100. He reports that it only has a trace of copper and it's mostly aluminum. I will be contacting Amazon about possible fraud.
________________________________________________ now back to original review from early 2011:
I just took delivery on a spool of this in black and a spool of it in red, and I'll describe it here... but first, I'd like to ask anyone out there if this is really copper wire.
IS IT?
Amazon is a nice buying experience usually, but in some cases like this there is no way to get a quick answer to a question, I don't know if I should return it or not.
The wire is silvery-color instead of copper-color. Now this could be because it's plated in silver or tin, which would be ok, or it could be that it's steel wire, which would not be OK. Wish me luck in figuring that out. The description claims it to be copper wire, but it is not copper color.
It is also not what one usually thinks of as battery cable, which is that fairly-rigid stuff that battery cables are made out of. This has much finer strands, and to my eye looks a lot narrower in the total strands than 4 gauge battery cable.
It is limp as a noodle, also unlike normal battery cable, and I assume it is more for installing stereo systems than being used as robust battery cable.
Any recommendations out there for how I can tell? I think I'll probably be returning it, because it simply isn't regular battery cable wire. But I might keep it IF it turns out to be copper wire.
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