mbrooke
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What is the power factor on the secondary of a short circuited POCO transformer? Say I jumped X1 to X0 on a single or 3 phase unit. What would my meter read PF wise?
210326-2352 EDT
mbrooke:
You have not clearly defined your question.
Define the two points in your system that are to define where the load starts of which you want to measure the power factor.
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I have found it to be more like X/R being four times that.210327-0423 EDT
mbrooke:
The power factor of that load is determined by the resistance and inductance of that short piece of wire shorting the transformer secondary. My guess is that at 60 Hz it is close to resistive, and thus PF is close to 1.
If you look at the input to the transformer with the secondary shorted, then inductive reactance may be moderately greater than the equivalent series resistance.
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210327-0423 EDT
mbrooke:
The power factor of that load is determined by the resistance and inductance of that short piece of wire shorting the transformer secondary. My guess is that at 60 Hz it is close to resistive, and thus PF is close to 1.
If you look at the input to the transformer with the secondary shorted, then inductive reactance may be moderately greater than the equivalent series resistance.
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I have found it to be more like X/R being four times that.
210327-1656 EDT
mbrooke:
In your post #8. Yes the transformer is an inductor.
But in your unclear post #1, as clarified in your post #5, you were talking about the power factor of the short circuit load on the transformer. That power factor has nothing to do with the transformer. It only has to do with the actual load.
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A typical AC power transformer operating at 60 Hz is fundamentally made up from two isolated coils of wire (meaning no significant conductive path from primary to secondary or to the magnetic core), and a magnetic core that electrically couples the two windings together by magnetic linkage. For a power transformer it is assumed that there is rather good magnetic coupling from primary to secondary.
Each winding has a series resistance, and s series inductance (leakage inductance). Leakage inductance is an inductive component in series with the resistance that results from incomplete coupling of the primary with the secondary.
There are various ways to create an equivalent circuit for a transformer. None exactly represent a real transformer, but most do an adequate job. A typical way is to have a series resistance, a series inductance, going to the input of an ideal transformer. Then there is a shunt inductance across the ideal transformer primary. This shunt inductance is typically ignored. In other words not in the equivalent circuit.
If you short the secondary of the ideal transformer the equivalent circuit becomes a series resistance with a small inductance. The turns ratio of the ideal transformer has no effect on the power factor of the system as viewed at the transformer input terminals.
If you view your circuit from the secondary, load side, of the transformer, then the short circuit current changes as you change the turns ratio, but the transformer input power factor does not change. And there is no significance to describing a power factor of the load, because it is assumed to be a short circuit.
210327-2141 EDT
I pulled out an old textbook and found the following information on a 10 kVA 2400 V primary transformer --- R = 10.4 ohms. and Xl = 14.6 ohms. So this is a lower power factor than my rectifier type transformer. I reflected the secondary impedance to the primary to determine what one sees at the primary.
Power factor does not change much as you change turns ratio. And you do not normally consider a different power factor for a secondary vs primary.
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210328-1426 EDT
mbrooke:
I think it is going to be hard for you to get a good grasp on electrical circuit theory on this forum. It is extremely inefficient here. You need to see if you can take some related college courses at a good school.
I will try to answer some of your questions.
Theoretically one can assume an ideal transformer where input, and output are related precisely by turns ratio, and there is no power loss. Then to this theoretical transformer you can place a series impedance on the input, or on the output, or part of that impedance on both sides of the transformer. In addition to this there is some shunt impedance somewhere or ignored.
The simplest circuit is to put all the series impedance on the input side and ignore any shunt impedance (by ignore means an open circuit).
So to further simplify the circuit eliminate the ideal transformer. This results in a series circuit of a resistance, an inductor, and a load.
The load can be a simple resistor, and thus the load power factor is unity. But the power factor at the input to the transformer is not 1.
If the load is zero impedance, then it has an undefined power factor. And the power factor at the transformer input is the power factor of the series resistance and inductance. Had there been a resistive load on the transformer, then the input power factor to the transformer would have moved to some degree toward 1.
Now consider a piece of wire Pi*6 ft long. No matter how I shape that wire its DC resistance remains a constant. However, its inductance and therefore its inductive reactance is very dependent on how that wire is shaped. If the wire is shaped into a circle its inductance is high compared to that same wire shaped into a very tight hairpin loop. So the power factor of the shorting wire is very dependent on how the wire is looped. Low inductance wire wound resistors are really made of a hairpin loop instead of just a wire wound around a core all in one direction.
If we make the short on the secondary of a transformer a very low impedance compared to the transformer internal impedance, then we really don't care what its power factor is because it won't affect the transformer input power factor very much.
ost identical to --- if we measure the primary current zero crossing. We have no way to get at and measure the equivalent secondary voltage zero croIf a transformer has a non-unity turns ratio, and we short the secondary, then the secondary short circuit current as viewed at the primary side will be different than as viewed on the secondary side, but the transformer power factor remains unchanged. Theoretically we study this, but can not perform an actual experiment. We can measure secondary current zero crossing, and compare with the primary voltage zero crossing. From this we can calculate power factor. But the results are almssing.
This may or may not answer some of your questions.
Secondary short circuit current can be much higher than primary because current is related by turns ratio.
If one assumes that a transformer is working in a linear range, then there is no step change in characteristics based on passing full load rating.
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