Will the manufacturer set parameters for the resistance of the secondary circuit conductors? Such as for long runs between the CTs and the meters? Or is total circuit resistance just adjusted with a pot?
Many utility systems and even some process control use CT's with 1A output. Every manufacturer of electronic overcurrent relays have options of either 1A or 5A inputs.I would like to know , If I have a CT in our electrial system with ration 500/1A. Does it mean that if the current is more than 500A , it would not funtion properly. If no , upto what current can it work without any problem ?
Voltage is irrelevant, the meter works on current.
There are likely limits but nothing you would run into in real life.
Depending on the purpose for measuring the current, the meter (load) and the CT, I would probably not recommend a 50ft run of #14.Bob, that was the part I was wondering about. If there ever had to be compensation made. But a piece of 14 gauge wire with 5 amps max flowing, is going to have very little losses.
Depending on the purpose for measuring the current, the meter (load) and the CT, I would probably not recommend a 50ft run of #14.
Oh yeah I understand that Bob, but as overall circuit resistance increases current should fall.
I*R = E
1 amp * 10 ohms = 10 volts
1 * 20 = 20 V
1 * 136.876 = 136.876 volts.
Unless you exceed the VA rating of the CT.In a word, no....
The CT emulates a constant current supply.
Given a 500:5, with 100 amps being measured.
If you have a {say} 10 ohm loop, it sources 1 amp. If you have a 20 Ohm loop, it sources 1 amp. If you have a 136.876 ohm loop, it sources 1 amp.
I'd say "until you exceed" but YMMV. My unspoken point was: short of falling off the end of the specs, the loop resistance is irrelevant to calibration.Unless you exceed the VA rating of the CT.
We generally use either 5VA or 15VA depending on the application.
Joe; I often write a response not just on my guess as to your specific knowledge; but to fill out the picture for someone reading the thread in the future.
{I also proofread badly, you grasped I mean 'OPEN-circuit' in that post.}
I routinely deal with power electronics with non-linear waveforms and have generally not found this to be a problem.Saturation of the CT core will occur and the accuracy of the CT will become severely diminished and the waveform distorted by harmonics resulting in lower than expected current based on the CT ratio. If used for protection, loss of coordination could result.
I routinely deal with power electronics with non-linear waveforms and have generally not found this to be a problem.
We typically use ACCTs to measure the AC into a rectifier. The output from the ACCTs is rectified and fed to a burden resistor where it then give a transformed down version of the current in the rectifier power circuit. Been doing that for a lot of years......
It's safer than using a shunt because the output is isolated from the power circuits and cheaper and more robust that Hall effect transducers.
That's fair enough.My response is based on the OP, which seemed to be electrical power system related. Power electronics, I will leave to you.![]()