winnie
Senior Member
- Location
- Springfield, MA, USA
- Occupation
- Electric motor research
IMHO a good reason to use thyristor soft start to limit transformer inrush is that you need to have some sort of hardware to bypass the resistor anyway; in any application where that bypass is a thyristor, then I'd consider phase controlling that thyristor and ditching the resistor.
You would be trading the design/size of the resistor for the complexity of the thyristor control. I don't know which wins.
If there is no load on the transformer, then a low wattage resistor with very sloppy resistor bypass is quite likely sufficient; the transformer itself limits any long duration heavy current flow through the resistor, and the magnetizing current will be low, so you don't need a big resistor and you don't need accurate timing. On the other hand, if you are starting a loaded transformer, then the design is likely much more critical.
At any given power level, precharge on a transformer is probably of lower total energy and shorter duration than precharge on a rectifier capacitor bank.
-Jon
You would be trading the design/size of the resistor for the complexity of the thyristor control. I don't know which wins.
If there is no load on the transformer, then a low wattage resistor with very sloppy resistor bypass is quite likely sufficient; the transformer itself limits any long duration heavy current flow through the resistor, and the magnetizing current will be low, so you don't need a big resistor and you don't need accurate timing. On the other hand, if you are starting a loaded transformer, then the design is likely much more critical.
At any given power level, precharge on a transformer is probably of lower total energy and shorter duration than precharge on a rectifier capacitor bank.
-Jon