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K8MHZ:
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I don't want this to go OT, but at 60 Hz, I have to disagree with you. At 150 MHz, I would agree with you about capacitive coupling as opposed to inductive coupling, not at 60 Hz.
is wrong.
I have explained this in other threads but will do it again.
To have a voltage generated by inductive coupling from another conductor there must be current flow in the other conductor. The magnetic flux produced around a wire is proportional to current. Zero current zero flux. The magnetically induced voltage in a conductor is v = K*df/dt where v is the induced voltage, K a constant, df/dt the rate of change of flux.
Capacitive coupling will be a function of the capacitance and resistance of a series circuit and the associated voltage divider result.
An experiment to illustrate why we are concerned with capacitive coupling in this "stray voltage" question, and not inductive. The meter is a Fluke 27, and the circuit is a 3 wire 50 ft extension cord. Test load about 12 A.
First: the EGC is left floating. No load current thru the circuit. The hot and neutral wires of the extension cord are connected to a 120 V source. The voltage between the floating EGC and neutral is 52 V. The meter input is 10 megohm shunted with some capacitance, maybe 100 pfd. This voltage is not inductively coupled because there is negligible current flowing. The cord is in a coil of about 20" diameter.
Second: the EGC is still floating, and the same coil configuration. The meter is connected from EGC at the plug end to the EGC at the socket end. Now an 11 turn 20" diameter coil exists connected to the meter. The residual induced voltage is 0.001 V.
A load current of about 12 A was connected to the socket end of the extension cord. The magnetically induced voltage is 0.002 V. Clearly a voltage level much lower than the capacitive coupled value of 52 V from the first experiment.
Third: same experiment as the second except uncoiled the cord into an undefined 1 turn loop. The no current reading was 0.001 V and with 12 A the reading was 0.002 V.
Fourth: a 2200 turn coil on a 0.5" x 0.5" coil form showed little induced voltage until it was in close proximity to the extension cord 20 " coil. Then the reading was about 0.015 V.
You do not magnetically induce large voltages without a large number of turns in a coil and high rates of change of flux coupling that coil.
These concepts are fundamental to high school physics and are extensively covered in lower level electrical engineering courses. One reference is "Electric and Magnetic Fields", Stephen S. Attwood, John Wiley & Sons, 3rd edition, 1949.
The approximate capacitance of my extension cord from hot to EGC is 1400 pfd. The capacitive reactance at 60 Hz is about 2 megohms. This would predict a greater voltage on the meter than I read, but the circuit is not a single capacitor and resistor.
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