substation guy
Member
how do you calculate neutral current on an unbalanced wye connected load i thought you just subtract the three amp readings from each leg think im wrong though anyone help me out here?
Not quite. I'll fix it for you.hope I typed that correctly
I neutral = SqRt of [A? +B? +C? - (A x B) - (B x C) - (C x A)]
Okay here's another look.
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Mine, of course. Charlie's is really the same perhaps but I think there is a parenthesis missing to make it accurate.Three different formulas which one is right?
In theory, if all three loads were equal, that is true.I'm sorry, I don't understand. 'So no neutral return path is needed'. .
only if all three phases are not equaly loaded. The neutral carries only the unbalanced load (theory).But I have to run a neutal with each hot leg to make it work.
You don't have to run a neutral to make it work (i.e. balanced or equal loads on all three lines), but line to neutral loads can be switched on and off individually, or loads can fail such as incandescent lamps thereby unbalancing the mwbc. If you switch one or two off, the neutral is necessary to make the second and/or third work properly.I'm sorry, I don't understand. 'So no neutral return path is needed'. But I have to run a neutal with each hot leg to make it work.
No "perhaps" about it. Gus had an error or two in the brackets and parenthesis stuff. But yours and mine are mathematically the same, and I posted first. So there! :grin:Charlie's is really the same perhaps but I think there is a parenthesis missing to make it accurate.
We have been here before. The formula given works only for the specific case of the same power factor for each phase.Not quite. I'll fix it for you.
We have been here before. The formula given works only for the specific case of the same power factor for each phase.
In general, it doesn't.
OP didn't.I believe that the OP originally indicated three equal resistive loads - why would they not have the same power factor ?