wirenut1980
Senior Member
- Location
- Plainfield, IN
I might get banned for this,
but what about an open wye-open delta bank? 2 phases on the primary with 3 phase secondary.
HEY - I get to declare the winner; or at least declare we have a consensus.
No love for the Nyquist rate?Check eBay for a .0000004 Hz scope. eBay has everything.
Ok, a sinusodial input on the primary.Good points.
Assume the applied primary voltage is characterized by the general function V(t)= A sin(ωt+φ0), where A, ω and φ0are constants. Apply any arbitrary set of turns ratios you desire between the primary winding and secondary taps.
We agree on what to call the device (YEA). Not sure we agree on why yet - but we seem to be getting there.
You need to check your understanding of stipulate. You don't get to "stipulate" anything. You can certainly offer your definition of phase to support your position. You don't get to foreclose on the definition though.Ok, a sinusodial input on the primary.
Given that a definition of phase has not been specified, I will make the stipulation that my technically correct definition still stands. I will further stipulate that we are not considering the number of phases present in the circuit due to currents (or we could get the 30-something? that pfalcon mentioned based on a technicality). While I'm stipluating I might as well stipulate that the voltage magnitudes on the secondary are all equal for the voltages we are considering.
With that, we can have voltages with a phase of (ωt+φ0) and voltages with a phase of (ωt+φ0+180?). So, using the technically correct definition for phase and the stipulations I noted, we can have up to two phases present at any given point in time.
However, it is still called a single-phase transformer.
I will add stipulations as many and as often as I please.You need to check your understanding of stipulate. You don't get to "stipulate" anything. You can certainly offer your definition of phase to support your position. You don't get to foreclose on the definition though.
I guess the "beef" is you don't want me to force you to agree to anything. It was intended to be a list of stipulations and you could accept or not. But my answers are not going to be binding until you adopt those stipulations.I will add stipulations as many and as often as I please.
Did you propose a different definition or did you not mean to imply that my definition was fine? After all, hearing no objection...mivey said:Given that a definition of phase has not been specified, I will make the stipulation that my technically correct definition still stands.
Did you propose that we also consider the phase of load currents?mivey said:I will further stipulate that we are not considering the number of phases present in the circuit due to currents.
Did your diagram intend to open up the discussion to the phase order of systems of voltages where multiple voiltage magnitudes are present?mivey said:I might as well stipulate that the voltage magnitudes on the secondary are all equal for the voltages we are considering.
With that, we can have voltages with a phase of (ωt+φ0) and voltages with a phase of (ωt+φ0+180?).
I've been trying to stay out of this part of the discussion but find I no longer can, at least for one post :blink:Ok, a sinusodial input on the primary....
Assume the applied primary voltage is characterized by the general function V(t)= A sin(ωt+φ0), where A, ω and φ0are constants. ...
...
With that, we can have voltages with a phase of (ωt+φ0) and voltages with a phase of (ωt+φ0+180?). So, using the technically correct definition for phase and the stipulations I noted, we can have up to two phases present at any given point in time.
Rightly so. :slaphead:However, it is still called a single-phase transformer.
Just an opinion.Given the reference is the primary voltage, it follows that secondary voltages be measured in the same manner.
I did not bother to count as I suspect it is really far removed from what rbalex wants to discuss. I just used the figure pfalcon threw out there.There's only 15 possible voltages at any instant, not thirty.
Any voltage reference frame is a choice, not a given.As the distinction between (ωt+φ0) and (ωt+φ0+180?) is nothing more than changing your leads from, for example, BD to DB and declaring it a different phase; I can only agree to it as a "pragmatic" interpretation of phase that will generate 30+ based on where you tap and which direction you place your taps.
Yes - I'm well aware of that. It's one more thing you don't do properly. What would be proper is to cite a source for your definition rather than assuming everyone agrees with it.I will add stipulations as many and as often as I please.
Given the reference is the primary voltage, it follows that secondary voltages be measured in the same manner. You can only have secondary voltages that I highlighted red. While you can measure voltages that I highlighted blue, they are still the same voltages... only polarity inverted. There's only 15 possible voltages at any instant, not thirty. Isn't voltage defined as the potential between two points? Flopping points to do the measuring doesn't give you a second voltage. It's still the same voltage... you are just perceiving it differently. And as I said the reference is primary voltage, if you flop leads to measure the secondary voltages, you also have to flop your reference leads. So technically, your reference timing shifted a half-cycle on the primary and you end up with secondary voltages as I highlighted red... :thumbsup:
Your'e not forcing me - you're trying to force everyoneI guess the "beef" is you don't want me to force you to agree to anything. It was intended to be a list of stipulations and you could accept or not. But my answers are not going to be binding until you adopt those stipulations.
Nope - I left the definition open. You can certainly use yours to support your position. Just no one has to accept it at the moment; which is basically what "stipulate" means in this context.Did you propose a different definition or did you not mean to imply that my definition was fine? After all, hearing no objection...
Nope, They're irrelevant in my opinion for the time being.Did you propose that we also consider the phase of load currents?
No - but if you want to chase another rabbit - start your own thread.Did your diagram intend to open up the discussion to the phase order of systems of voltages where multiple voiltage magnitudes are present?
You're welcome.Thanks for the lesson in legalese.
An opinion expressing that you should be consistent in how you use a reference frame.Just an opinion.
15 red: AB, AC, AD, AE, AF, BC, BD, BE, BF, CD, CE, CF, DE, DF, EF.I did not bother to count as I suspect it is really far removed from what rbalex wants to discuss. I just used the figure pfalcon threw out there.
But as Smart$ points out, the waveform is only different because you reversed how you measured one axis of your 2D reference frame but were inconsistent by not reversing the second axis to match.Any voltage reference frame is a choice, not a given.
Had me wondering there for a split secondBTW I'm trying to see if I can alter the pole to allow changing votes. Remember, I didn't ask what the transformer was, I asked "how many phases"?
I did not assume everyone agreed with it. It was the definition I used to go along with my response. My improper use of the word stipulation did not reflect my intent.Yes - I'm well aware of that. It's one more thing you don't do properly. What would be proper is to cite a source for your definition rather than assuming everyone agrees with it.
Sticking with (NOT stipulatingBTW I'm trying to see if I can alter the pole to allow changing votes. Remember, I didn't ask what the transformer was, I asked "how many phases"?
Apparently wiping it out is the best I can do - I truly apologize.