People always ask: "How do I choose the right temperature rating for my cable?"
It seems simple. But open any cable catalog and you'll find ratings ranging from 60°C to 1,000°C+ — PVC, XLPE, silicone, FEP, PFA, PTFE, mica, mineral insulated (MI). How do you know which one is right for your application? Choose too low, and your cable fails prematurely — causing downtime, safety hazards, and replacement costs. Choose too high, and you waste money on unnecessary performance.
The answer is a simple engineering formula:
This guide walks you through a step-by-step decision framework to determine exactly what temperature rating you need — no more guessing, no more over-specifying, no more under-specifying.
At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team offers free consultations to help you apply this framework to your specific application.
The single biggest mistake in cable selection is using ambient air temperature instead of cable surface temperature.
| Installation Location | Ambient Temp | Measured Cable Surface Temp | Difference | Impact on Selection |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control cabinet (center) | 35°C | 42°C | +7°C | Small difference |
| Control cabinet (near VFD heat sink) | 38°C | 52°C | +14°C | 85°C cable marginal → 105°C recommended |
| Cable tray above motor | 40°C | 58°C | +18°C | 85°C cable insufficient → 105°C required |
| Cable bundle (tightly packed, 20+ cables) | 45°C | 65°C | +20°C | 105°C cable needed |
| Near steam pipe (6 inches) | 50°C | 72°C | +22°C | 105°C PVC marginal → XLPE or silicone needed |
| Inside motor junction box | 55°C | 78°C | +23°C | 105°C PVC insufficient → 125°C+ required |
| Step | Action | Tool |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Measure cable surface temperature at the hottest accessible point | Infrared thermometer (non-contact) or type-K thermocouple |
| 2 | Measure during normal operation (not startup or shutdown) | — |
| 3 | Measure after equipment has been running for at least 30 minutes (steady state) | — |
| 4 | Measure at multiple locations — record the maximum | — |
| 5 | If cables are bundled, measure surface temperature of inner cables (hottest) | — |
At Dingzun Cable, we provide a free temperature measurement worksheet to help you document your readings. Contact our technical team to request a copy.
Once you have your measured maximum cable surface temperature, add a 20°C safety margin to determine your minimum required cable rating.
| Measured Cable Surface Temp | +20°C Safety Margin | Minimum Required Rating | Recommended Material |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30°C | 50°C | 60-70°C | Standard PVC (70-85°C) |
| 40°C | 60°C | 80-85°C | 85°C PVC or 105°C PVC |
| 50°C | 70°C | 90-105°C | 105°C PVC (heat-resistant) |
| 60°C | 80°C | 100-105°C | 105°C PVC or 125°C XLPE |
| 70°C | 90°C | 110-125°C | 125°C XLPE or 180°C silicone |
| 80°C | 100°C | 120-125°C | 125°C XLPE or 180°C silicone |
| 90°C | 110°C | 130-150°C | 180°C silicone or 200°C FEP |
| 100°C | 120°C | 140-150°C | 180°C silicone or 200°C FEP |
| 120°C | 140°C | 160-180°C | 180°C silicone or 200°C FEP |
| 140°C | 160°C | 180-200°C | 200°C FEP |
| 160°C | 180°C | 200-220°C | 200°C FEP or 260°C PFA |
| 180°C | 200°C | 220-240°C | 260°C PFA |
| 200°C+ | 220°C+ | 240-260°C+ | 260°C PFA or Mineral Insulated (MI) |
| Margin | Service Life Expectation | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| <10°C | <1 year | High — rapid thermal degradation |
| 10-20°C | 2-5 years | Medium — accelerated aging |
| 20-30°C | 5-10 years | Low — normal service life |
| >30°C | 10-20+ years | Very low — optimal longevity |
At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team can help you apply the 20°C rule to your specific application and recommend the optimal material — not just the cheapest option or the most expensive "safe" choice.
Once you know your required rating, select the appropriate insulation material.
![]()
(Continuous temperature ratings by material)
| Material | Continuous Rating | Peak/Surge | Low-Temp Flexibility | Chemical Resistance | Cost (Relative) | Best Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard PVC | 70-85°C | 90-100°C | Poor (-10°C) | Poor | 1.0* | Office, dry indoor, low temp |
| Heat-Resistant PVC | 105°C | 115-125°C | Poor (-10°C) | Poor | 1.1-1.2* | Control cabinets, warm plant areas |
| XLPE | 125°C | 150°C | Fair (-40°C) | Good | 1.3-1.5* | Power cables, wet locations, moderate heat |
| Silicone Rubber | 180°C | 220-250°C | Excellent (-60°C) | Poor (oil/fuel) | 2.0-2.5* | High-flex, robotics, clean heat |
| ETFE | 150°C | 200°C | Good (-65°C) | Excellent | 2.5-3.0* | Aerospace, abrasion-prone |
| FEP | 200°C | 250°C | Good (-65°C) | Excellent | 2.5-3.0* | Industrial high temp — most popular |
| PFA | 260°C | 300°C | Good (-65°C) | Excellent | 3.5-4.0* | Extreme heat, chemical plants |
| PTFE | 260°C | 300°C | Poor (stiff) | Excellent | 3.5-4.0* | Static high-heat applications |
| Mica/Glass | 450-600°C | 800°C+ | Poor | Good | 5.0-8.0* | Fire survival, emergency circuits |
| Mineral Insulated (MI) | 1000°C+ | 1400°C+ | Rigid | Excellent | 15-20* | Furnace interior, direct flame |
| Required Rating (Continuous) | Recommended Material | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ≤85°C | Standard PVC | Lowest cost, adequate for mild environments |
| 85-105°C | Heat-Resistant PVC | 20-30% longer life than standard PVC in warm areas |
| 105-125°C | XLPE | Better electrical properties, moisture resistance |
| 125-150°C | Silicone (flexibility priority) or XLPE (cost priority) | Silicone for dynamic; XLPE for static |
| 150-200°C | FEP | Industrial workhorse — best balance of cost and performance |
| 200-260°C | PFA or PTFE | PFA for flexibility; PTFE for static |
| >260°C | Mica or Mineral Insulated (MI) | Fire survival or extreme industrial heat |
At Dingzun Cable, we manufacture cables in all these materials. Our unbiased engineering team helps you select the optimal material for your actual temperature requirement — not upsold to unnecessary premium materials.
Temperature rating is critical, but other factors may force you to choose a higher-rated material.
| Factor | Standard Temperature Rating | Why You Might Need Higher | Recommended Upgrade |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical exposure (oils, solvents, acids) | 105°C PVC may suffice thermally | PVC swells or dissolves in chemicals | FEP or PFA (chemically inert, 200-260°C) |
| Continuous flexing (robotics, cable track) | Silicone (180°C) is excellent | Lower-rated materials (PVC, XLPE) have poor flex life | Silicone (180°C) or high-flex FEP |
| Outdoor / UV exposure | PVC degrades in UV in 1-2 years | Need UV-stabilized jacket | LSZH, PUR, or FEP (UV-resistant) |
| Moisture / direct burial | XLPE (125°C) is excellent | PVC absorbs moisture | XLPE (125°C) or PUR-jacketed |
| Abrasion / mechanical stress | Silicone (180°C) is soft, abrades easily | Need tougher jacket | ETFE (150°C) or PFA (260°C) with braid |
| Plenum / air handling space | Standard PVC not permitted | Need low-smoke, flame-retardant | LSZH (90-105°C) or FEP (200°C) |
| If You Need... | And Also Need... | Choose... |
|---|---|---|
| 105-125°C rating | Oil resistance | XLPE (125°C) or FEP (200°C) |
| 150-200°C rating | Flexibility | Silicone (180°C) — but no oil exposure |
| 150-200°C rating | Chemical resistance | FEP (200°C) — best combination |
| 200-260°C rating | Flexibility | PFA (260°C) — more flexible than PTFE |
| 200-260°C rating | Lowest cost | PTFE (260°C) for static applications |
| High temperature + direct burial | Moisture resistance | XLPE (125°C) or MI (1000°C+) |
At Dingzun Cable, we consider your complete application environment — temperature, chemicals, flexing, moisture, UV, abrasion — to recommend the optimal cable, not just the cheapest option that meets the temperature requirement in isolation.
Even experienced engineers make these temperature rating errors.
| Mistake | Why It's Wrong | Correct Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Using ambient temperature instead of cable surface temperature | Cable surface is often 10-30°C hotter due to self-heating and radiant heat | Measure cable surface directly with infrared thermometer |
| No safety margin ("It says 105°C, and my equipment is 100°C, so it's fine") | No margin for measurement error, aging, or process variation | Add 20°C minimum safety margin |
| Assuming all 105°C PVC is the same | Quality varies dramatically; premium compounds age better | Specify verified 105°C rating with test documentation |
| Choosing the highest rating "just to be safe" | PFA (260°C) costs 3-4* more than FEP (200°C) for no benefit if you only need 150°C | Match rating to actual need + 20°C margin |
| Ignoring low-temperature requirements | Cable rated for 200°C may be stiff at -20°C | Verify low-temp flexibility if needed |
| Selecting PVC for chemical exposure | 105°C PVC still swells in oils and solvents | Choose FEP/PFA for chemical resistance regardless of temperature |
At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team reviews your application details to catch these mistakes before they become field failures — saving you downtime and replacement costs.
Use this quick-reference guide to select your temperature rating in 60 seconds.
| Step | Your Measurement | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Step 1 | Measured cable surface temperature = _____ °C | — |
| Step 2 | Add 20°C safety margin = _____ °C | Required minimum rating |
| Step 3 | Find your range below | Select material |
| Required Rating | Recommended Material | Typical Applications |
|---|---|---|
| ≤85°C | Standard PVC | Office, mild indoor |
| 85-105°C | Heat-Resistant PVC or XLPE | Control cabinets, warm plant |
| 105-125°C | XLPE or Silicone | Motor junction boxes, moderate heat |
| 125-150°C | Silicone (flex) or XLPE (cost) | Near heaters, ovens (exterior) |
| 150-200°C | FEP | Industrial high temp — most common |
| 200-260°C | PFA or PTFE | Extreme heat, furnaces, chemical |
| >260°C | Mica or Mineral Insulated | Direct flame, fire survival |
At Dingzun Cable, we offer a free consultation to help you apply this calculator to your specific equipment. Contact our engineering team with your measured temperatures for a custom recommendation.
Scenario: A food packaging plant used 85°C PVC cable for their heat sealing equipment. Cable surface temperature measured 75°C.
| Parameter | 85°C Cable (Actual Selection) | 105°C Cable (Should Have Selected) |
|---|---|---|
| Safety margin | 10°C (85-75=10) | 30°C (105-75=30) |
| Service life achieved | 8 months | 6+ years (still operational) |
| Failure mode | Insulation cracking, short circuit | None |
| Cost per failure | $3,000 (repair + 3 hours downtime @ $1,000/hr) | $0 |
| Replacements over 5 years | 7-8* | 0 |
| 5-Year total cost | ~$25,000 | ~$4,000 (single installation) |
The Lesson: The 105°C cable cost 15% more upfront ($4,000 vs $3,500) but saved $21,000+ in downtime and replacement costs over 5 years.
At Dingzun Cable, we document case studies like this to help customers understand the true cost of under-specification. Our engineering team can provide a free cost-benefit analysis for your application.
About Dingzun Cable: Your High Temperature Cable Engineering Partner
With 20+ years of specialized manufacturing experience, Dingzun Cable is a trusted partner for global industrial facilities, machinery manufacturers, and maintenance engineers requiring high-quality high temperature cables for demanding applications. We combine deep materials expertise with extreme customizability to deliver cables that perform reliably in your specific thermal environment.
(Dingzun Cable high temperature cable samples)
| Capability | Dingzun Specification |
|---|---|
| Temperature Range | 60°C to 260°C (PVC to PFA); 1000°C+ (MI) |
| Material Options | PVC, XLPE, Silicone, FEP, PFA, PTFE, Mica, Mineral Insulated |
| Conductor Options | Bare copper, Tinned (TC), Silver-plated (SPC), Nickel-plated (NPC) |
| Conductor Gauge | 36 AWG to 4/0 |
| Number of Conductors | 1 to 100+ |
| Shielding | Foil, braid (70-95%), composite |
| Jacket Materials | PVC, LSZH, PUR, Silicone, FEP, PFA |
| Certifications | ISO 9001:2015, UL, CE, RoHS, REACH |
| Testing | 100% electrical testing on every reel |
Why Dingzun Cable for Your High Temperature Cable Needs:
People always ask: "How do I choose the right temperature rating for my cable?"
It seems simple. But open any cable catalog and you'll find ratings ranging from 60°C to 1,000°C+ — PVC, XLPE, silicone, FEP, PFA, PTFE, mica, mineral insulated (MI). How do you know which one is right for your application? Choose too low, and your cable fails prematurely — causing downtime, safety hazards, and replacement costs. Choose too high, and you waste money on unnecessary performance.
The answer is a simple engineering formula:
This guide walks you through a step-by-step decision framework to determine exactly what temperature rating you need — no more guessing, no more over-specifying, no more under-specifying.
At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team offers free consultations to help you apply this framework to your specific application.
The single biggest mistake in cable selection is using ambient air temperature instead of cable surface temperature.
| Installation Location | Ambient Temp | Measured Cable Surface Temp | Difference | Impact on Selection |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control cabinet (center) | 35°C | 42°C | +7°C | Small difference |
| Control cabinet (near VFD heat sink) | 38°C | 52°C | +14°C | 85°C cable marginal → 105°C recommended |
| Cable tray above motor | 40°C | 58°C | +18°C | 85°C cable insufficient → 105°C required |
| Cable bundle (tightly packed, 20+ cables) | 45°C | 65°C | +20°C | 105°C cable needed |
| Near steam pipe (6 inches) | 50°C | 72°C | +22°C | 105°C PVC marginal → XLPE or silicone needed |
| Inside motor junction box | 55°C | 78°C | +23°C | 105°C PVC insufficient → 125°C+ required |
| Step | Action | Tool |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Measure cable surface temperature at the hottest accessible point | Infrared thermometer (non-contact) or type-K thermocouple |
| 2 | Measure during normal operation (not startup or shutdown) | — |
| 3 | Measure after equipment has been running for at least 30 minutes (steady state) | — |
| 4 | Measure at multiple locations — record the maximum | — |
| 5 | If cables are bundled, measure surface temperature of inner cables (hottest) | — |
At Dingzun Cable, we provide a free temperature measurement worksheet to help you document your readings. Contact our technical team to request a copy.
Once you have your measured maximum cable surface temperature, add a 20°C safety margin to determine your minimum required cable rating.
| Measured Cable Surface Temp | +20°C Safety Margin | Minimum Required Rating | Recommended Material |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30°C | 50°C | 60-70°C | Standard PVC (70-85°C) |
| 40°C | 60°C | 80-85°C | 85°C PVC or 105°C PVC |
| 50°C | 70°C | 90-105°C | 105°C PVC (heat-resistant) |
| 60°C | 80°C | 100-105°C | 105°C PVC or 125°C XLPE |
| 70°C | 90°C | 110-125°C | 125°C XLPE or 180°C silicone |
| 80°C | 100°C | 120-125°C | 125°C XLPE or 180°C silicone |
| 90°C | 110°C | 130-150°C | 180°C silicone or 200°C FEP |
| 100°C | 120°C | 140-150°C | 180°C silicone or 200°C FEP |
| 120°C | 140°C | 160-180°C | 180°C silicone or 200°C FEP |
| 140°C | 160°C | 180-200°C | 200°C FEP |
| 160°C | 180°C | 200-220°C | 200°C FEP or 260°C PFA |
| 180°C | 200°C | 220-240°C | 260°C PFA |
| 200°C+ | 220°C+ | 240-260°C+ | 260°C PFA or Mineral Insulated (MI) |
| Margin | Service Life Expectation | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| <10°C | <1 year | High — rapid thermal degradation |
| 10-20°C | 2-5 years | Medium — accelerated aging |
| 20-30°C | 5-10 years | Low — normal service life |
| >30°C | 10-20+ years | Very low — optimal longevity |
At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team can help you apply the 20°C rule to your specific application and recommend the optimal material — not just the cheapest option or the most expensive "safe" choice.
Once you know your required rating, select the appropriate insulation material.
![]()
(Continuous temperature ratings by material)
| Material | Continuous Rating | Peak/Surge | Low-Temp Flexibility | Chemical Resistance | Cost (Relative) | Best Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard PVC | 70-85°C | 90-100°C | Poor (-10°C) | Poor | 1.0* | Office, dry indoor, low temp |
| Heat-Resistant PVC | 105°C | 115-125°C | Poor (-10°C) | Poor | 1.1-1.2* | Control cabinets, warm plant areas |
| XLPE | 125°C | 150°C | Fair (-40°C) | Good | 1.3-1.5* | Power cables, wet locations, moderate heat |
| Silicone Rubber | 180°C | 220-250°C | Excellent (-60°C) | Poor (oil/fuel) | 2.0-2.5* | High-flex, robotics, clean heat |
| ETFE | 150°C | 200°C | Good (-65°C) | Excellent | 2.5-3.0* | Aerospace, abrasion-prone |
| FEP | 200°C | 250°C | Good (-65°C) | Excellent | 2.5-3.0* | Industrial high temp — most popular |
| PFA | 260°C | 300°C | Good (-65°C) | Excellent | 3.5-4.0* | Extreme heat, chemical plants |
| PTFE | 260°C | 300°C | Poor (stiff) | Excellent | 3.5-4.0* | Static high-heat applications |
| Mica/Glass | 450-600°C | 800°C+ | Poor | Good | 5.0-8.0* | Fire survival, emergency circuits |
| Mineral Insulated (MI) | 1000°C+ | 1400°C+ | Rigid | Excellent | 15-20* | Furnace interior, direct flame |
| Required Rating (Continuous) | Recommended Material | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ≤85°C | Standard PVC | Lowest cost, adequate for mild environments |
| 85-105°C | Heat-Resistant PVC | 20-30% longer life than standard PVC in warm areas |
| 105-125°C | XLPE | Better electrical properties, moisture resistance |
| 125-150°C | Silicone (flexibility priority) or XLPE (cost priority) | Silicone for dynamic; XLPE for static |
| 150-200°C | FEP | Industrial workhorse — best balance of cost and performance |
| 200-260°C | PFA or PTFE | PFA for flexibility; PTFE for static |
| >260°C | Mica or Mineral Insulated (MI) | Fire survival or extreme industrial heat |
At Dingzun Cable, we manufacture cables in all these materials. Our unbiased engineering team helps you select the optimal material for your actual temperature requirement — not upsold to unnecessary premium materials.
Temperature rating is critical, but other factors may force you to choose a higher-rated material.
| Factor | Standard Temperature Rating | Why You Might Need Higher | Recommended Upgrade |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical exposure (oils, solvents, acids) | 105°C PVC may suffice thermally | PVC swells or dissolves in chemicals | FEP or PFA (chemically inert, 200-260°C) |
| Continuous flexing (robotics, cable track) | Silicone (180°C) is excellent | Lower-rated materials (PVC, XLPE) have poor flex life | Silicone (180°C) or high-flex FEP |
| Outdoor / UV exposure | PVC degrades in UV in 1-2 years | Need UV-stabilized jacket | LSZH, PUR, or FEP (UV-resistant) |
| Moisture / direct burial | XLPE (125°C) is excellent | PVC absorbs moisture | XLPE (125°C) or PUR-jacketed |
| Abrasion / mechanical stress | Silicone (180°C) is soft, abrades easily | Need tougher jacket | ETFE (150°C) or PFA (260°C) with braid |
| Plenum / air handling space | Standard PVC not permitted | Need low-smoke, flame-retardant | LSZH (90-105°C) or FEP (200°C) |
| If You Need... | And Also Need... | Choose... |
|---|---|---|
| 105-125°C rating | Oil resistance | XLPE (125°C) or FEP (200°C) |
| 150-200°C rating | Flexibility | Silicone (180°C) — but no oil exposure |
| 150-200°C rating | Chemical resistance | FEP (200°C) — best combination |
| 200-260°C rating | Flexibility | PFA (260°C) — more flexible than PTFE |
| 200-260°C rating | Lowest cost | PTFE (260°C) for static applications |
| High temperature + direct burial | Moisture resistance | XLPE (125°C) or MI (1000°C+) |
At Dingzun Cable, we consider your complete application environment — temperature, chemicals, flexing, moisture, UV, abrasion — to recommend the optimal cable, not just the cheapest option that meets the temperature requirement in isolation.
Even experienced engineers make these temperature rating errors.
| Mistake | Why It's Wrong | Correct Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Using ambient temperature instead of cable surface temperature | Cable surface is often 10-30°C hotter due to self-heating and radiant heat | Measure cable surface directly with infrared thermometer |
| No safety margin ("It says 105°C, and my equipment is 100°C, so it's fine") | No margin for measurement error, aging, or process variation | Add 20°C minimum safety margin |
| Assuming all 105°C PVC is the same | Quality varies dramatically; premium compounds age better | Specify verified 105°C rating with test documentation |
| Choosing the highest rating "just to be safe" | PFA (260°C) costs 3-4* more than FEP (200°C) for no benefit if you only need 150°C | Match rating to actual need + 20°C margin |
| Ignoring low-temperature requirements | Cable rated for 200°C may be stiff at -20°C | Verify low-temp flexibility if needed |
| Selecting PVC for chemical exposure | 105°C PVC still swells in oils and solvents | Choose FEP/PFA for chemical resistance regardless of temperature |
At Dingzun Cable, our engineering team reviews your application details to catch these mistakes before they become field failures — saving you downtime and replacement costs.
Use this quick-reference guide to select your temperature rating in 60 seconds.
| Step | Your Measurement | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Step 1 | Measured cable surface temperature = _____ °C | — |
| Step 2 | Add 20°C safety margin = _____ °C | Required minimum rating |
| Step 3 | Find your range below | Select material |
| Required Rating | Recommended Material | Typical Applications |
|---|---|---|
| ≤85°C | Standard PVC | Office, mild indoor |
| 85-105°C | Heat-Resistant PVC or XLPE | Control cabinets, warm plant |
| 105-125°C | XLPE or Silicone | Motor junction boxes, moderate heat |
| 125-150°C | Silicone (flex) or XLPE (cost) | Near heaters, ovens (exterior) |
| 150-200°C | FEP | Industrial high temp — most common |
| 200-260°C | PFA or PTFE | Extreme heat, furnaces, chemical |
| >260°C | Mica or Mineral Insulated | Direct flame, fire survival |
At Dingzun Cable, we offer a free consultation to help you apply this calculator to your specific equipment. Contact our engineering team with your measured temperatures for a custom recommendation.
Scenario: A food packaging plant used 85°C PVC cable for their heat sealing equipment. Cable surface temperature measured 75°C.
| Parameter | 85°C Cable (Actual Selection) | 105°C Cable (Should Have Selected) |
|---|---|---|
| Safety margin | 10°C (85-75=10) | 30°C (105-75=30) |
| Service life achieved | 8 months | 6+ years (still operational) |
| Failure mode | Insulation cracking, short circuit | None |
| Cost per failure | $3,000 (repair + 3 hours downtime @ $1,000/hr) | $0 |
| Replacements over 5 years | 7-8* | 0 |
| 5-Year total cost | ~$25,000 | ~$4,000 (single installation) |
The Lesson: The 105°C cable cost 15% more upfront ($4,000 vs $3,500) but saved $21,000+ in downtime and replacement costs over 5 years.
At Dingzun Cable, we document case studies like this to help customers understand the true cost of under-specification. Our engineering team can provide a free cost-benefit analysis for your application.
About Dingzun Cable: Your High Temperature Cable Engineering Partner
With 20+ years of specialized manufacturing experience, Dingzun Cable is a trusted partner for global industrial facilities, machinery manufacturers, and maintenance engineers requiring high-quality high temperature cables for demanding applications. We combine deep materials expertise with extreme customizability to deliver cables that perform reliably in your specific thermal environment.
(Dingzun Cable high temperature cable samples)
| Capability | Dingzun Specification |
|---|---|
| Temperature Range | 60°C to 260°C (PVC to PFA); 1000°C+ (MI) |
| Material Options | PVC, XLPE, Silicone, FEP, PFA, PTFE, Mica, Mineral Insulated |
| Conductor Options | Bare copper, Tinned (TC), Silver-plated (SPC), Nickel-plated (NPC) |
| Conductor Gauge | 36 AWG to 4/0 |
| Number of Conductors | 1 to 100+ |
| Shielding | Foil, braid (70-95%), composite |
| Jacket Materials | PVC, LSZH, PUR, Silicone, FEP, PFA |
| Certifications | ISO 9001:2015, UL, CE, RoHS, REACH |
| Testing | 100% electrical testing on every reel |
Why Dingzun Cable for Your High Temperature Cable Needs: