Jerramundi
Senior Member
- Location
- Chicago
- Occupation
- Licensed Residential Electrician
A question about Voltage Drop for you boys.
My inner perfectionist tends to nitpick things so I have ask to ensure I'm not crazy (n.b. the latter may be true).
Would I be correct in saying that the way the Voltage Drop formula(s) are structured, that we are effectively placing the Load Current at the END of the circuit? (i.e. "END" meaning the distance from the source to the load and back to the source).... as opposed to at the actual load itself (i.e. "a one-way trip").
Borrowing an example from a Mike Holt Newsletter on Voltage Drop Calculations...
What is the voltage drop of two No. 12 conductors that supply a 16 ampere, 120 volt load which is located 100 feet from the power supply (200 feet of wire)?
(a) 3.2 volts (b) 6.4 volts (c) 9.6 volts (d) 12.8 volts
Answer: (b) 6.4 volts
Voltage Drop = I x R
“I” is equal to 16 amperes
“R” is equal to 0.4 ohms (Chapter 9, Table 9: (2 ohm/1,000 feet) x 200 feet
Voltage Drop = 16 amperes x 0.4 ohms
Voltage Drop = 6.4 volts, (6.4 volts/120 volts = 5.3% volts drop)
Operating Voltage = 120 volts – 6.4 volts
Operating Voltage = 113.6 volts
Would it not be more accurate to say that the "Operating Voltage" of the load itself only sees HALF of the drop that we are calculating here?
I understand that this is "just how things are done" and I'd be better off just running with the industry standard, but I have to ask...
I feel like if I were to disconnect the neutral at the source (big no-no, I know) and take a potential difference measurement, I would get 113.6V between the very end of the neutral wire and neutral bus (that much checks out in my mind)...
...but at the load itself, the potential difference there or the "Operating Voltage" would be more like 116.8V?
My inner perfectionist tends to nitpick things so I have ask to ensure I'm not crazy (n.b. the latter may be true).
Would I be correct in saying that the way the Voltage Drop formula(s) are structured, that we are effectively placing the Load Current at the END of the circuit? (i.e. "END" meaning the distance from the source to the load and back to the source).... as opposed to at the actual load itself (i.e. "a one-way trip").
Borrowing an example from a Mike Holt Newsletter on Voltage Drop Calculations...
What is the voltage drop of two No. 12 conductors that supply a 16 ampere, 120 volt load which is located 100 feet from the power supply (200 feet of wire)?
(a) 3.2 volts (b) 6.4 volts (c) 9.6 volts (d) 12.8 volts
Answer: (b) 6.4 volts
Voltage Drop = I x R
“I” is equal to 16 amperes
“R” is equal to 0.4 ohms (Chapter 9, Table 9: (2 ohm/1,000 feet) x 200 feet
Voltage Drop = 16 amperes x 0.4 ohms
Voltage Drop = 6.4 volts, (6.4 volts/120 volts = 5.3% volts drop)
Operating Voltage = 120 volts – 6.4 volts
Operating Voltage = 113.6 volts
Would it not be more accurate to say that the "Operating Voltage" of the load itself only sees HALF of the drop that we are calculating here?
I understand that this is "just how things are done" and I'd be better off just running with the industry standard, but I have to ask...
I feel like if I were to disconnect the neutral at the source (big no-no, I know) and take a potential difference measurement, I would get 113.6V between the very end of the neutral wire and neutral bus (that much checks out in my mind)...
...but at the load itself, the potential difference there or the "Operating Voltage" would be more like 116.8V?
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