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#1
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Gary Schafer wrote in
: The fields in the air conditioner motors suddenly collapse when power is removed. The collapsing fields will generate a high voltage spike throughout your boats mains system. Any other equipment that is turned on at that time will receive those high spikes of voltage. Everything that is turned on is connected to the air conditioner motors. You can guess what can happen with voltage spikes fed to some types of equipment. If you shut down the AC systems first you avoid any kick back voltage spikes being fed to other equipment. The fields just collapse and no voltage spikes go anywhere. Wow! All this time I thought Tesla's multiphase AC power system had collapsing fields 120 times per second, not when I unplugged the shore power cable!.... Which one of the boater electrical expert books at Waste Marine did you get all this bull**** from, anyways, Gary? AC systems don't work like DC systems.....(c; |
#2
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On Thu, 17 Feb 2005 20:37:46 GMT, Larry W4CSC wrote:
Gary Schafer wrote in : The fields in the air conditioner motors suddenly collapse when power is removed. The collapsing fields will generate a high voltage spike throughout your boats mains system. Any other equipment that is turned on at that time will receive those high spikes of voltage. Everything that is turned on is connected to the air conditioner motors. You can guess what can happen with voltage spikes fed to some types of equipment. If you shut down the AC systems first you avoid any kick back voltage spikes being fed to other equipment. The fields just collapse and no voltage spikes go anywhere. Wow! All this time I thought Tesla's multiphase AC power system had collapsing fields 120 times per second, not when I unplugged the shore power cable!.... Which one of the boater electrical expert books at Waste Marine did you get all this bull**** from, anyways, Gary? AC systems don't work like DC systems.....(c; I know you slept through the basic AC theory class but the DC one too! :) As I am sure you missed the lab part too, You can try for yourself. Take a little 12 volt ac motor or transformer and connect its 12 volt winding to a 12 volt ac power source. Hold on to each lead of the motor or transformer bare wires if you dare. Touch them and remove them from the 12 volt ac source. I bet you let go rather quickly. :) Better yet hook your oscilloscope to the winding instead of your fingers. Look closely as you disconnect the winding from the power source. Turn the gain down on the scope so you can see the high voltage spike before it goes off the screen. You keep disconnecting the shore cable without turning things off first and you wonder why your mov's are popping! Those things do wear out you know, or do you? Regards Gary |
#3
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"Gary Schafer" wrote in message
... You can try for yourself. Take a little 12 volt ac motor or transformer and connect its 12 volt winding to a 12 volt ac power source. Hold on to each lead of the motor or transformer bare wires if you dare. Touch them and remove them from the 12 volt ac source. I bet you let go rather quickly. :) Better yet hook your oscilloscope to the winding instead of your fingers. Look closely as you disconnect the winding from the power source. Turn the gain down on the scope so you can see the high voltage spike before it goes off the screen. That is why equipment is required to have a snubber network. This will absorb most of the spike down to a safe level for other equipment on the mains. Meindert |
#4
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"Larry W4CSC" wrote in message
... Gary Schafer wrote in : Wow! All this time I thought Tesla's multiphase AC power system had collapsing fields 120 times per second, not when I unplugged the shore power cable!.... There's a huge difference timing here. The AC power system goes from maximum voltage to 0 over a period of 8.3msec, which is slow compared to breaking the circuit instantaneously. Meindert |
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