Products
Building Wire
Resources
Automotive
Resources
Signal Wire
Resources
New Products
All Products
Building Wire
Resources
Automotive
Resources
Signal Wire
Resources
Building Wire
Power Grid
Automotive
Signal Wire
CCA is a bimetal product created by an industrial process called cladding. A bimetal is a metal that has two distinct metallic zones united by a metallurgical bond that is stronger than the two materials it unites. The core is made from AA 8000 series aluminum, and the exterior layer is high-purity (99.8% O2-free) copper. The low oxygen content minimizes conductor oxidation, which means antioxidant joint compounds are not required at terminations. The cladding process results in a unique metal, stronger than the two metals it unites, and creates a conductor that is pliable, elastic, thermally stable and strong.
Due to copper shortages in the early 1950s, cable manufacturers came up with a conductor made from electrical-grade 1350 aluminum. By the 1960s, aluminum building wire was widely installed all over the country. However, by 1968, the aluminum building wire used for branch circuits was identified as a hazard because it was subject to thermal instability and galvanic corrosion when terminated to the wiring devices of the era. These problems were responsible for a product recall unequaled in the electrical industry at the time. Soon after 1350 aluminum conductors were pulled from the market, CCA emerged as a solution. It was brought to Underwriters Laboratories for performance testing in the late 1960s, and it was allowed into the 1971 NEC , making it one of only three conductors permitted by the Code . CCA was widely used for the next decade because the price of copper remained high. Its use greatly decreased after the end of the Vietnam War when copper prices plummeted due to diminishing demand by the military. CCA, with its high material and manufacturing costs, could no longer compete with commodity-copper conductors. Copper prices remained very low for many years until around 2005, creating an opportunity for CCA to re-emerge as an alternative.
CCA has several advantages when compared to aluminum conductors:
CCA also has advantages when compared to copper-only conductors:
CCA is available in most commonly used insulations, including THHN, THWN, XHHW and USE. Currently, it is popular for NM and MC applications for residential and commercial projects, and is available as service cable in types SER and SEU. CCA has also become popular for several lowvoltage applications, including coaxial and twisted-pair cables. It is not available for Cat-rated cable due to signal performance issues.
CCA has been in the NEC since 1971 in sizes No. 12 and larger. Regarding ampacity, it is listed to be the same as aluminum. Size No. 14 is being considered in the current Code cycle with a rating of 10A. This could be very useful for the many low-amperage circuits we are seeing for LED lighting applications.
Be sure you understand CCA’s advantages, disadvantages and installation and termination requirements before including it in your estimates and installations.