Choice_Gorilla
Senior Member
- Location
- New England
- Occupation
- Journeyman Electrician
I was reading through Soares Grounding and Bonding and it says:
“…any circuit with insulated conductors at different instantaneous potentials and a potential from ground will have capacitance and capacitive reactance.”
Are they stating that all AC circuits, regardless of the presence of a capacitor in the circuit, will have some level of capacitive reactance adding to the overall impedance? Would this be due to the insulation along the length of the wire “storing a charge”, treating the entire conductor like a capacitor that never discharges? Or am I missing something?
“…any circuit with insulated conductors at different instantaneous potentials and a potential from ground will have capacitance and capacitive reactance.”
Are they stating that all AC circuits, regardless of the presence of a capacitor in the circuit, will have some level of capacitive reactance adding to the overall impedance? Would this be due to the insulation along the length of the wire “storing a charge”, treating the entire conductor like a capacitor that never discharges? Or am I missing something?