i made a post a few days back about using 14 AWG house hold grounding solid copper wire as a high current shunt and i would like to fowlow up on my trials
someone posted that the temp co of the wire is simply too high to be useful and the wire will heat up way to fast to be useful
yes and no! ... yes the tempco was so high it was unusable short of calibrating it before every use
no the shunt wire did not heat up at all at 9.5 amps for 1 hour (seeing how it was thinner than the wires used to connect it ... it was not a real concern)
here is the rig that i used to test it

it is all messy so let me explain
the large meter is my reference ... its on the low side and in amp mode
for current regulation i use a SIMPLE mosfet on a fanned heatsinc with SIMPLY a pot on the gate ... i adjust the pot untill i have the current desired ... this was VERY stable not drifting at all in 1000 counts
EDIT: for the power supply i used a standard 250 watt benchtop PSU modified HEAVILY ... big inut chokes, big output chokes and filters, slightly larger caps and ground isolated (shorted to ground here tho ...)
here is the circuit i used

i used a simple instantiation amp that i had sitting in my parts bin that i use on all sorts of things ... but im sure it worked just fine for this
Results i dont remember what i had the pot set as but the gain should be ~ 200 ish
at room tempature for a full hour the voltage out at 9.5 amps was 2.415v and only drifted by 4 on the LSD
as SOON as i applied heat to the copper it jumped up to 3.2ish volts than slowly bleed down
CONCLUSION if its not being constantly adjusted for temperature or in a temperature controlled environment ITS USELESS
sorry to whoever i doubted!