Wiring our layouts to be as safe as our houses has been a particular interest for me. Starting a house fire with my basement empire is not one of my goals! This post reflects my view of things after doing the best research I can. It's prompted by the wiring table mentioned, from an OGR video layout host.
A recent video (GLA Vol. 11, Bramlage and Bartizek layouts) included a table provided to Bill Bramlage by a model RR friend, intended for him to use in safely wiring his many layout circuits. It didn't look right to me, and it has bugged me enough to find the source for the table---which is NOT intended for purposes like our layouts. The table is intended for automotive, motorcycle and winch 12 volt wiring where loads are often only for a short period of time and wire is not expected to get hot enough to cause a problem during the expected duration of the load (like a winch on your Jeep). The design is for short term loads at the larger currents, and also for maximum voltage drop of 0.5 volts at the current load indicated---that's the reason for the wire length being in the table.
The first item below is that table (with the lower amperages included at the top, which are cut off to begin at "0 to 7" in the version given to Bill Bramlage by his friend), as well as its possibly original source based on an image search (it and versions of it are found on multiple websites used by automotive/motorcycle/offroad hobbyists).
Below that are two tables relevant to our wiring in layouts, if we want to have the same safety margin as our house wiring. In addition note the correction factors table in the NEC table page; those would apply to the tinier wires too. Also remember the standard safety margin is to design the circuit load to be no more than 80% of the fuse or circuit breaker (and wire gauge's) rating. For 12G wire that means 20 amp circuit protection, and no more than a 16 amp maximum normal load. For 16G it's 10 amp protection and max 8 amp normal load. It doesn't matter what the voltage is: a certain wire gauge still gets just as warm at XX amps in our 18v circuits as it does in a 110 or 220v house circuit!
First is the NEC table for wires of mainly 14G and larger, then another table for smaller wires.
I've also emailed Rich Melvin with these same details today, so he can do any communicating he wishes to do.
Look forward to the views and responses from forum participants.
Cheers, cnwdon
http://www.cycleterminal.com/
The National Electrical Code NEC table 310.15 (B)(16) addresses our kind of wiring and wire gauges. Here is a copy of that from an electrical training company website. Click on or copy and paste the link to see the source with better resolution.