Re: travellers
Rich000,
When the current on one traveller stops, leaving that conductor warm, that conductor starts to cool. No new calories of heat are released from the I?R electric to thermal energy conversion in this conductor after the current stops.
The other traveller starts conducting, and it is cool, having only the heat in it that it has absorbed from the ambient of its immediate vicinity. As the I?R electric to thermal energy conversion occurs, calories are added to the conductor and its temp starts to rise.
The units of heat, calories (or BTUs), collect, raising temperature, and flow outwards to volumes of lower concentrations of heat (lower temperature) at a rate determined by the temperature difference and the thermal conductivity of the materials (along with radiation and convection).
Bottom line, when only one traveller at a time is carrying current, the calories released from the I?R is constant whether the current stays in one traveller all the time, or goes back and forth. The thermal stress on the conductors in a raceway will not increase from the stress created by one conductor.