cadpoint
Senior Member
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- Durham, NC
NO! The units are Identical. They are Equal. They are Interchangeable!!!!!
As an application is applied! I'll give you that & no I didn't look up the answer!
NO! The units are Identical. They are Equal. They are Interchangeable!!!!!
You mean you have more than 1/100 as many as he?by the way, i just saw that cadpoint has over 2400 posts, and i only have 27, now 28, so i thought i just might throw this in to up the ante.
OK.NO! The units are Identical. They are Equal. They are Interchangeable!!!!!
OK.
Fine.
Interchange 55kVA to the equivalent kW.
What is your answer?
by the way, i just saw that cadpoint has over 2400 posts, and i only have 27, now 28, so i thought i just might throw this in to up the ante.
55KVA = 55 KW. You didn't read anything I wrote, did you?Interchange 55kVA to the equivalent kW.
What is your answer?
No, you also didn't read what I wrote. Electrons don't just go bouncing around for no apparent reason, and they don't move back and forth between the load and the source doing nothing. These electrons are flowing through a voltage differential, and that by definition, is expending or producing work. Work is expended in one portion of the cycle and given back in the other portion. Just because the net/average work is canceling out doesn't mean that no work is being done in the process.Then, by this definition, "reactive power" is really a misnomer because no work is done. Energy is merely moved back and forth, and we measure this flow in VARs.
Rick -
Did you forget "vars" in this list? Or did you leave them out on purpose?
cf
Perhaps you could take time to read some of the posts.rick said:No, you also didn't read what I wrote.
I am sorry, I could have sworn I posted a response to this last night, but maybe I am just getting senile. VARs is an unusual case because we have taken a basic unit of measure and added a secondary condition to it. The unit of measure is the same, which is VA or Watts or j/s, but we have added a condition to this indicating that the units are limited to being "reactive".Rick -
Still waiting on an answer (RE: VARS)
I have read the posts and I fully understand the topic. Your VARs example is the only situation that comes close to fully understanding the situation. But note that VARs is the ONLY unit throughout this discussion that imposes this additional condition.Perhaps you could take time to read some of the posts.
Sorry Larry, but this is the same thing that Rattus stated. Reactive power does do work, but like Rattus and others, you are confusing the average work with the belief that no actual work is being performed.No, the reactive power gets nothing productive done, but yes, it heats up the wire it flows in just the same. Watts is watts, they're just not all productive.
The reactive power has volts and amps, just as the real power does. However, the reactive power represents energy that flows through the system, but does not reflect a transmission of energy from the power source to the load.
How'd I do?![]()
Interchange 55kVA to the equivalent kW.
What is your answer?
Only for the very specific case of unity power factor.55KVA = 55 KW.
What if you used feet up for real power, and feet left and right for reactive power? Would that make for a better analogy?This is comparable to using units of Feet-Right or Feet-Left when dealing with distance. The core units are still Feet, but we have added the exterior condition of Right or Left. If you stepped 5 feet to your left, but were instructed to use the dimension of Ft-R, then you would have to say that you moved (-5) Ft-R. The core units are still feet, but you have moved a portion of the function into the units.
What I meant is that the reactive power does not get taken from the motor shaft and do that kind of real work.Sorry Larry, but this is the same thing that Rattus stated. Reactive power does do work, but like Rattus and others, you are confusing the average work with the belief that no actual work is being performed.
--- VARs is an unusual case because we have taken a basic unit of measure and added a secondary condition to it. The unit of measure is the same, which is VA or Watts or j/s, but we have added a condition to this indicating that the units are limited to being "reactive".---
---Edited to add, that this does not apply to VA, Watt, or j/s. This is ONLY the special case of VAR, and it is the "R" in VAR that compels this.---
--- But note that VARs is the ONLY unit throughout this discussion that imposes this additional condition.---
I don't quite know what you are trying to do here. KVA and KW are not equivalent. I, for one, never said they were, and I am not sure that anyone else did either.
Do you agree with that statement?The units are Identical. They are Equal. They are Interchangeable!!!!!
I already answered that in post #44.Real power, reactive power, and apparent power are different physical phenomena, and we use different names for their respective units of measure. But their units of measure break down to the same fundamental unit: kilogram-meter squared per second cubed. Do you dispute that statement?
Thank you.My Freshman physics book states, "power is the time rate of doing work"--real power that is. Energy flows in one direction, and we measure this flow in watts.
Then, by this definition, "reactive power" is really a misnomer because no work is done. Energy is merely moved back and forth, and we measure this flow in VARs.
Real and reactive power combine in the power triangle to obtain apparent power which we measure in VAs.
Clearly, these units, although similar in nature, are not interchangeable.
VA is a measurement of the rate of work or energy flow. For our circuit, two things happen:Only for the very specific case of unity power factor.
55kW tells you precisely the rate of doing work.
55kVA tells you the product of current and voltage.
You simply cannot infer or equate it to the rate of doing work. It could be some. Or none.
I think you have encapsulated the basic misconception at a stroke.VA is a measurement of the rate of work or energy flow.