K8MHZ
Senior Member
- Occupation
- Electrician
gar said:080915-2123 EST
K8MHZ:
Put a load on a voltage source that is not a pure resistance and you can separate the current into two components, resistive and reactive. The resistive component times the source voltage is the power being consumed by the load. This in phase current component and the applied voltage allow you to calculate the equivalent shunt resistance of the load.
An inductor in series with a resistance can be replaced by a pure inductor in parallel with a shunt resistance. Here it is easy to see what the resistive current component is and the inductive component.
Now suppose you have two impedances with equal equivalent shunt resistances, but different reactances, then in the center tapped transformer circuit the neutral current contains no resistive component, but has a reactive component.
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I am quite familiar with reactance. That was not what the OP was referring to, however, and somehow phases started getting discussed and it threw me.
I am quite familiar with the OP's question and it's answer as it was drilled into our heads in the second year of our apprenticeship. Granted, the correct way to outline the problem would have been to use the phrase 'of equal impedance' but real issue was the true purpose of using a common neutral in a center tapped application.
Thanks for taking the time to offer an explanation.
So...how's the weather on your side of the state, anyway???