I went to post this in the new thread, but realized it actually belonged here.
For all of the militant, repetative posting insisting that instantaneous power (what you call the "vi product") has an "offset", it just does not. No matter how you doll it up, that "offset" appears to be a phase angle between the instananeous values calculated from v(t) and i(t) - and that is a problem. But it turns out to be a rather minor problem.
Here's my translation:
You (plural - but not "all-ya'll") decree there is a phase shift between the sinusoids V and I. Then you use the phase angle to calculate instantaneous i(t1) from the value v(t1). Now because you have decreed there is a phase shift, then you say the instantaneous power has a phase angle.
Now why is that concept patently useless?
Because of the circular reasoning. First you decreed there is a phase shift between V and I. Using that phase shift, you calculate an instantaneous power and decree that it is into a reactive load because of the phase shift. Uhh... okay, you want to start with a phase shifted V - I and then calculate the load is reactive. Wow, now that is some real engineering reasoning - or just patently useless. I'll let you choose.
cf