Yes. I ought to be surprised.Congratulations. You got all that exactly backwards. :slaphead:
But rather disappointed that I am not.
Yes. I ought to be surprised.Congratulations. You got all that exactly backwards. :slaphead:
You drew a nodal diagram for your source, but you don't know what a nodal diagram is. I do not have the patience to play games with someone pretending to be something they are not. If you had not come back with a smart alec answer, I would have just let it go, and your guise would not have been revealed.In post #433, you claimed
"that your circuit, as drawn, is wrong."
Please post why YOU think is a correct version.
Without dancing around the topic.
Actually, that's the anode. As drawn, the cathodes are connected to each other and form the positive leg of the load.
Of course, a certain member claims that my drawing is wrong so, I extend you the same invitation. Draw it as how you think it should be.
Which is obviously not what Besoeker was stating. To interpret the drawing that way is to purposely try to mis-understand.I think the problem is the time line, what is what at a given point in time, when I laid out the post I described the time line as 90? and 270? as to when Ia and Ib is positive respectively, if both Ia and Ib were positive at the same time then the SCR firing would be at the same time and would result in a single firing per cycle
And that is an issue: a circuit is neither in phase nor out of phase. You must define a direction before you can define in or out of phase. That brings up the next issue: there is no universal direction.lets put this on the side for a moment and conceder what is a in-phase circuit, would not a in-phase circuit have a positive on one conductor and a negative on the other at a given point in time?
Ia and Ib can not be said to be in phase or our of phase with anything until you specify the direction.If the above is true then so is the time line on a center tapped transformer when Ia is positive then Ib is negative, to say other wise would be a contradiction, now if Ia and Ib is in-phase, then Ian and Inb must also be in-phase or the SCR/diode circuit would not function as both SCR's/diodes would fire at the same time, it is the function of the center tap transformer being in-phase that allows one diode to fire each half cycle during the time line.
And because you have made a decision about how the voltages are going to be used, that removed what would have been arbitrary. I may have a different circuit that uses the voltages in a different arrangement. Both of us would be using the same forces but in different directions.There is nothing that would say my circuit is "right" over yours being "right" because they are both valid uses of real voltages.Nothing arbitrary about it. It's how things work in real life.
This question is directed to a single phase 120/240 volt transformer and some of the answers has went into two separate generators producing 120 volts all the way to three phase power plants producing DC voltages. None of which addresses the 120/240 volt circuit in question.I wanted to run a pump at 240v vs 120v, for obvious reasons, voltage drop, wire size, etc. But... I get this a lot from people, 240v is more dangerous. So I'm looking for a better way to explain to people that its just as safe as a 120v circuit but with better benefits.
I thank each of the posters in this thread as it is growing into that all elusive 1000 post thread but even though it is growing rapidly I just can?t see what some of you are trying to say that has one iota to do with the original post
This question is directed to a single phase 120/240 volt transformer and some of the answers has went into two separate generators producing 120 volts all the way to three phase power plants producing DC voltages. None of which addresses the 120/240 volt circuit in question.
I think it is a fair question to ask: "if the line-to-ground voltage is essentially 120 volts for both 120 and 240 volt systems {at least for the ones we normally see}, how do we still get 240 volts?". One must understand the relationship between voltages that have a grounded neutral reference (X2 & X3 grounded neutral). In this line of questioning, an X1 or X4 reference would not be as clear.
Does anybody really know much of anything? We are beings living in a vast universe that we barely understand. We gain some knowledge and make bold declarations about how right or wrong something is. What we know and what we think is nothing compared to the knowledge of the One who made our universe.I am beginning to think that none of you have any clue as to what you are talking about and are just listening to your heads roar instead of sticking to the simple 120/240 volt transformer which will have a ?single phase? supplying the load.
Any voltage can have a direction defined to be the direction of push and the direction of pull. We say a push is when the potential rises across the source in the same direction that current flows from the source feeding the load (the generator pushes current to the load). In Besoeker's circuit, he wants to use the "push" from n to a and the "push" from n to b.There seems to be the belief that there is really two phases of 120 volts that oppose each other at 180 degrees and some that believe as I do that the name of the panel to which all this connects tells the story, ?single phase? that is always in tune with itself and never opposing itself.
I am here strictly for my own enjoyment. I like threads like this because they make you think and work on your communication skills.Please do not let up as two things are occurring, 1- we might reach that all elusive 1000 post thread and, 2- I have never laughed so much or so hard. The phrase that laughter is the best medicine is true as I have felt the best in the past week as I have in several years.
Well now I must not have enough education to understand all this push and pull.Does anybody really know much of anything?
Yes, I have stated this previously, the math is Van+Vnb = Vab = Van-Vbn, therefore Vnb=-vbn and so Vab = Van-(-Vnb).And I am stating that Van and Vbn are mutually displaced by 180deg.
Do you dispute that?
It is just another way to describe increasing potential or decreasing potential given a chosen direction.Well now I must not have enough education to understand all this push and pull...I also have a hard time seeing now in a single coil of wire how something can be pulling and pushing at the same time half way through the coil of wire.
But does not the polarity control the direction? Choose which flow you want, electron or conventional, does the polarity not control the direction in which the electrons flow?Contrary to what some posters think, there is no universal law saying which direction is the "right" direction. They are confusing polarity with direction. Polarity and direction are related, but they are not the same thing.
Darn it ma'am, get back here and join in. :happyyes:
PS. I told you it was just starting 200 posts ago.
Now that was funny. :lol:Anyway, this should be on a talk show!
...
Ok, you fill in the blanks!
Well now I must not have enough education to understand all this push and pull.
I was under the impression that there were two different theories of how electrons moved around a circuit and they were as follows, Electron flow where electrons move from negative to positive and the conventional flow where electrons flow from positive to negative.
What I have not learned as yet is that anything is pushing or pulling anything. The way is see it is the electrons are moving from one potential to the other.
I also have a hard time seeing now in a single coil of wire how something can be pulling and pushing at the same time half way through the coil of wire. Take away the induced counter voltage and look at the wire as one straight piece of wire how can the electrons be pushed half way through then all of a sudden the electrons start being pulled?
Maybe I just figured it out. The first half the electrons are doing the electron flow thing and the second half they are doing the conventional flow thing. Yea I can see it clearly now.
In post #433, you claimedYou drew a nodal diagram for your source, but you don't know what a nodal diagram is. I do not have the patience to play games with someone pretending to be something they are not. If you had not come back with a smart alec answer, I would have just let it go, and your guise would not have been revealed.
ACBut does not the polarity control the direction? Choose which flow you want, electron or conventional, does the polarity not control the direction in which the electrons flow?
AC
It's AC into and out of the transformer. The electrons don't flow anywhere. The just wiggle back and forth a tiny bit.
Thought you might have known that.
Moving off topic further...If I understand what that has been posted in this thread the reason why they ?wiggle back and forth a tiny bit? is due to the speed at which the polarity changes. During the positive side of the sine wave all the electrons are aligned a certain way and then during the negative portion the electrons reverse or in other words they align according to the polarity of the sine wave or flow according to the polarity. Is this not correct?
You have a point.I have stayed out of this discussion, at least since the last time I tried (unsuccessfully) to bring it back to the original topic. But now I see comments of a personal nature starting to come into the discussion.