











⚡ Power your projects with cables that never quit!
The Shirbly 4 Gauge Battery Cable features 3 meters each of red and black 4 AWG pure copper wire with 673 strands for superior conductivity. Rated for up to 600 volts and designed to withstand extreme temperatures from -58°F to +221°F, it’s protected by a flexible, durable EPDM insulation jacket resistant to heat, oil, moisture, and wear. Perfectly suited for automotive, marine, solar, and generator applications, this cable combines professional-grade quality with versatile performance to keep your power flowing reliably.








| ASIN | B0CDLKNP51 |
| Batteries Required? | No |
| Batteries included? | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | 5,098 in Automotive ( See Top 100 in Automotive ) 24 in Car Battery Jump Leads |
| Colour | 3 Meters Red + 3 Meters Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (858) |
| Date First Available | 23 Oct. 2023 |
| Included components | 1 |
| Item Weight | 1.92 kg |
| Manufacturer | Shirbly |
| Manufacturer reference | CA-Welding Cable-4AWG-B&R-10FT |
| Material | Copper |
| Package Dimensions | 33 x 29.3 x 6.2 cm; 1.92 kg |
| Part number | CA-Welding Cable-4AWG-B&R-10FT |
| Size | 4 AWG |
| Voltage | 600 Volts |
J**N
Real coper
Real coper, soft easy to handle
J**H
As described, good cable
as described
S**K
Battery Cable for my Victron Orion XS 50. Good choice for 5m or under DC-DC charging cable.
I got the 6 Gauge Battery Cable for my Victron Orion XS 50. This is the correct size for 5m or under for the DC-DC chargers. Excellent cable very easy to work with being flexible and would buy again.
R**D
Becky14
Great quality good value for money
D**N
Good cables
Why did you choose this product over others?: Quick delivery good description of item. Was all good quality
C**E
Perfect
Excellent smells a bit but not too bad. I ordered the wrong size. Had to send it back or ordered the right one. All good.
S**L
Good thick cable
This cable is great very thick to make solar battery and inverter cables ,as mentioned in other reviews it does have a slight odour but it's hardly noticeable unless you get it right under your schnozzer and have a good sniff
S**G
not good
its too light cable to join 12 volt batteries together
M**.
Llego rápido y de muy buena calidad
I**N
Fantastic wire. Pure copper. Very flexible.
S**D
Greetings, electrical enthusiasts and camper connoisseurs! It’s 11:50 AM PDT on Tuesday, May 20, 2025, and I’ve just survived the electrifying circus of installing a 300 AH lithium battery into my Lance overhead camper using this 6 AWG battery cable set (20FT red + 20FT black, pure copper, Standard USA OFC wire). With 50+ units sold last month, this cable has apparently become the duct tape of the off-grid world, and I’m here to deliver a somewhat technical breakdown of my adventure. Spoiler: My camper’s now a power beast, and I’ve got some singed eyebrows to prove it. The Mission: Upgrading to Lithium Glory My Lance overhead camper, a cozy fortress on wheels, was limping along with a pair of Group 24 AGM batteries—200 AH total, with a measly 100 AH usable thanks to the 50% discharge ceiling. For a guy running a 1500W inverter, a 12V fridge, and a dream of off-grid bliss, this was like powering a spaceship with a potato battery. Enter the 300 AH LiFePO4 (LiTime brand, 200A BMS, 3840 Wh capacity), a sleek 63-lb titan promising 270 AH of usable juice (90% discharge, take that, AGMs!). My plan: wire it to a 40A DC-DC charger off my truck’s 160A alternator, add a 600W solar array (via an MPPT controller), and laugh in the face of boondocking limits. Cue the cables. The Cable Specs: A Nerd’s Dream with a Twist This 6 AWG cable set—20 feet of red and 20 feet of black—boasts pure copper construction with an oxygen-free copper (OFC) core, rated for automotive, welding, battery, solar, and generator use. At 6 AWG, it handles 50A continuous at 20°C with a 0.5% voltage drop over 20 feet (per NEC tables, ~0.08 ohms/1000ft resistance), dropping to 40A at 60°C ambient—perfect for my 30A charger load. The insulation is thick (likely 90°C-rated PVC), and the stranded design (hundreds of tiny wires) ensures flexibility, though it’s a beast to uncoil without turning into a human pretzel. I chose 20FT lengths to span the 15-foot run from battery to charger/inverter, leaving slack for terminal lugs and a tidy loop. The red-black combo? Pure aesthetics—my camper now looks like it’s ready for a power-up montage. But let’s be real: uncoiling these suckers was like wrestling an anaconda on a caffeine binge. I nearly tripped over the red one, which is now nicknamed “The Tripwire of Doom.” Installation: A Technical Comedy Show Installation began with a terminal dance. I crimped 3/8” lugs onto the ends using a 6-ton hydraulic crimper (50 kN force, don’t skimp here—cheap crimps fail at 30A), torquing them to 15 ft-lbs per ABYC standards. The 300 AH battery slid into its compartment, and I routed the cables through a 1-inch conduit, securing with zip ties every 12 inches to avoid chafing (vibration is the enemy at 60 mph). The positive cable got a 50A fuse 6 inches from the battery—safety first, unless you enjoy fireworks. Here’s where the humor hit. While connecting the inverter (Edecoa 3000W), I cross-threaded a lug—yes, me, the “precision engineer”—and sparked a 120A surge when the BMS cut in. The cable held like a champ, but my heart rate hit 180 bpm. After a reset and a sheepish re-crimp, the system stabilized at 13.6V under a 20A load (fridge + lights), with a 0.1V drop—well within the 3% limit (0.4V max at 12V nominal). The solar array kicked in at 50V open-circuit, feeding 15A into the MPPT, and I’m now at 98% SOC after a day’s charge. Success, with a side of sweat! Performance: Power Unleashed with Laughs This setup is a game-changer. The 300 AH battery ran my 1200W microwave for 15 minutes, dropping from 100% to 92% (120A peak, 80A sustained—BMS hummed happily). A 7-day boondock test showed 200Wh daily use (fridge + LED lights), leaving 80% capacity—enough for a week, or a Netflix binge if I skip the popcorn. The 6 AWG cables handled the 30A charge current with a 0.15°C temperature rise (measured with an IR thermometer), staying cool under pressure. Weight savings? 69 lbs vs. the old AGMs—my camper’s now a lean, mean, power machine. The funny bit? I misjudged the slack and now have a 3-foot red cable loop dangling like a power tail. My dog thinks it’s a chew toy, and I’m one tug away from a DIY arc welder. Also, the black cable’s label rubbed off mid-install, so I’m labeling it with a Sharpie—high-tech, right? Durability and Quirks After a week, the insulation shows no cracking, and the copper’s oxidation is nil (thanks, OFC!). The 20FT length is overkill for my 15FT run, but it’s better than splicing—resistance jumps 20% with a bad joint. At an implied $0.50/FT (guessing from the 50+ sales), it’s a steal, though I’d pay extra for pre-lugged options next time. The flexibility is great, but it’s a storage nightmare—my garage now looks like a cable octopus attacked. Pros • Handles 50A with aplomb, perfect for 30A DC-DC loads • Pure copper OFC ensures low resistance (0.491 ohms/1000FT) • Durable insulation survives camper vibrations • Red-black combo adds flair to my power setup Cons • Uncoiling is a wrestling match with fate • Extra length = dangling hazards (hello, dog toy) • Label wear-off requires DIY marking • Pricey if you don’t need 20FT (but who’s counting?) Final Verdict This 6 AWG, 20FT red + 20FT black battery cable set turned my Lance camper’s electrical upgrade into a technical triumph with a hilarious twist. Paired with my 300 AH LiFePO4, it’s delivering 270 AH of usable power, outclassing my old AGMs by a mile. The install was a rollercoaster—sparks, trips, and all—but the cables held firm, keeping voltage drop under 0.2V at 30A. If you’re wiring a camper and can handle the uncoiling chaos, this is your ticket to off-grid glory. Just watch your step—or your dog might rewire your dreams! P.S. Order now, or I’ll send my cable loop to trip you next!
S**.
Great, heavy duty, pure copper. Top notch.
J**D
Rubberized fairly thick insulation, flexible, core is full AWG size, secure crimp (hydraulic) in appropriate size lugs. Would buy again.
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