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#171
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Don Kelly wrote:
---------------------------- "bud--" wrote in message .. . Don Kelly wrote: ---------------------------- "Tony Hwang" wrote in message news:[email protected] wrote: In alt.tv.tech.hdtv Michael A. Terrell wrote: | Bull****. Like ALL charges, it simply seeks a complete circuit to | flow. You have absolutely no grasp of the basic concepts, yet you | continue to spout your ignorance and lies. Not true. When you close a switch between a power source and a pair of wires that go out yonder, the electrical energy does not "know" whether the circuit is complete or not. If it refused to flow, it would not be able to find out. It will flow, whether the circuit is complete or not. What happens after that depends on what is at the other end, which could be an open condition, a short circuit, or some kind of resistive or reactive load. You've claimed to have worked in broadcasting in an engineering role. So you should understand what happens at the end of an open transmission line. The electricity flows to get to the open end. Yet it is not a "complete circuit". Hmmm, You seem to be confused between current flow(energy) and voltage(poential) Nothing flows in an open circuit. If not we have to rewrite Ohm's law. Show your credential to make a stamement like that. Shameful. ------------------------ Actually, you are showing some confusion. Phil is right in that he is bringing out a point that normal lumped RLC circuit theory doesn't handle because it essentially treats the speed of propagation of electrical signals as if it were infinite- which isn't true. . 2)Also, on energizing a line whether it is open or closed, there is a current flow as the applied voltage "sees" the characteristic impedance of the line (wire or whatever) so a current will flow-even on an open circuit- until there is a modifying reflection from the termination. For a house the distances are such that this may be of the order of 0.1-0.2 microsecond. After all such reflections at terminations have ceased or are negligable, conventional circuit theory is applicable. In these situations, you are dealing with wave propagation rather than conventional circuit theory. This is the regime that is of interest in considering "surge protectors" The last standards for simulating typical surge waveforms I have seen (IEEE) were 1.2 us rise time, 50 us duration 8 us rise time, 20 us duration a ring wave with a frequency about 100kHz. All are long relative to 0.2 microsecond, so wave propagation should not be relevant for household circuits. ---------------------------------------- Your point is true- the time interval is so small that for practical purposes it can be ignored. I am not denying that. Obviously I gave that impression- sorry for that. I was simply pointing out that phil had it right in theory and Tony had it wrong. After this time for the wave to travel to the end and be reflected (and other re-reflections die out) then conventional circuit theory is applicable. The fact that the time is extremely small simply means that we can pretend that it doesn't even exist. While Matzloff is right in the time for a round trip is of the order of 200m, it is also dangerous to assume that one can ignore waves for shorter distances. For example, a stroke to a tower of an EHV line (a lot less than 200m) will go down the tower, meet ground resistance and be reflected. Such reflections have been found to be more likely to cause flashover than direct strokes to the line (EPRI). Similarly, the practice in substations is not "whole station" protection (where this is applicable, it must be done considering a number of factors- quite interesting ) and putting specific protection as near as possible to the protected apparatus-definitely within, say, 10m. - It's not just the time to peak that is the critical factor. Do a lattice diagram approach or use Bergeron's method (Hermann Dommel did a lot of work with this at EPRI and has a lot of papers in IEEE- more dealing with switching surges than lightning). It's been a long time since I did any calculations in this area so I would have to brush up. I am real glad the probability of a direct house strike is low. I have some appreciation for the earthing/bonding required in a substation (also referred to by nobody). Now - is this all germane to household protection? You say not and I agree with you- because household equipment can ride through - at worst- doubling of the clamped voltage for a very short time even though the clamped voltage is relatively small compared to the peak of the incoming surge. -- The effect Martzloff was specifically looking for in experiments was doubling of voltage. As an aside, several of the experiments done by Martzloff were at EPRI. -- bud-- |
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#173
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In alt.engineering.electrical Eric wrote:
| I can attest to vhf/uhf content in lightning strikes. I worked for a | communications outfit. We owned and maintained a number of comm sites | with towers and antennas. One strike on an antenna destroyed the LDF rf | cable all the way to the polyphaser at the bottom of the tower. It had | blowouts at about 1 foot intervals all down it's length suggesting a | 1/2 wave of about 1 foot or approx 460 mhz. That's one hell of a lot of | energy at that frequency.. Apparently you had some kind of resonance involved. Maybe the antenna itself can cause that. Or the output tank circuit in the transmitter. Once you have the resonance to narrowband the energy, it would only take a reflection back up the line and you turn a propogating surge into standing waves. -- |WARNING: Due to extreme spam, I no longer see any articles originating from | | Google Groups. If you want your postings to be seen by more readers | | you will need to find a different place to post on Usenet. | | Phil Howard KA9WGN (email for humans: first name in lower case at ipal.net) | |
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#174
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w_tom wrote:
But when a plug-in protector is sold to maximize profits (not for protection), then grossly undersized protectors also create another problem - scary pictures: http://www.hanford.gov/rl/?page=556&parent=554 w_ can't understand his own hanford link. It is about "some older model" power strips and says overheating was fixed with a revision to UL1449 that required thermal disconnects. That was 1998. There is no reason to believe, from any of these links, that there is a problem with suppressors produced under the UL standard that has been in effect since 1998. But with no valid technical arguments all w_ has is pathetic scare tactics. For reliable information on surges and protection read the IEEE and NIST guides. (Both say plug-in suppressors are effective.) -- bud-- |
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#175
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#176
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On May 5, 2:20*pm, wrote:
In alt.engineering.electrical wrote: | On May 5, 1:44?am, wrote: | In alt.tv.tech.hdtv bud-- wrote:| wrote: | | | In alt.engineering.electrical Leonard Caillouet wrote:| | wrote in message | | | ... | | | In alt.tv.tech.hdtv Franc Zabkar wrote: | | | | | | | | | The MOVs will act like conductors when they are clamping. ?The surge will | | | take both paths ... the path through the MOVs, and the path going past the | | | MOVs. ?In general, about 50% will go each way. ?That can vary at higher | | | frequencies. | | | | | | Why would you assume that 50% will go each way when you don't know the | | | impedance of each direction? ?When conducting, or at failure, the MOV has a | | | very low impedance. | | | | There is a distinction between "go each way" and "what comes back" due to | | the impedance. ?It will be about 50% that goes each way _because_ the power | | itself does not (yet) know the impedance (at a distance), until it gets | | there. | | | | Another installment of Phil's Phantasy Physics using transmission line | | theory. | | Not understanding it is your loss. | | | I have to agree that this is Phantasy Physics. * *We're supposed to | believe that a surge reaching a MOV is going to split 50-50, with half | of it going to the MOV path and half moving on down the line, | reagrdless of the impedance of the two paths? * *That would render all | surge protection about 50% effective. You did not read very carefully. *The reference to 50-50 split is about the contribution of the MOVs themselves. *That is an essential understanding of the components so the whole system can be figured out. *The impedance down the paths is another separate component, which also has to be figured in when determining the whole picture. You have confused a component with the entire system. *You need to read more carefully. *Or you need to understand the distinction of individual components as they apply to the whole system The whole wiring system is extrememly complex. *It cannot be understood properly without first understanding the components. *And that includes understanding that MOVs, when they conduct, do look to the propogating energy as two paths to go down, and it will (initially) go both ways in about an equal amount. Maybe you should review what you actually stated in the context of current surge supression discussion: " "The MOVs will act like conductors when they are clamping. The surge will | | take both paths ... the path through the MOVs, and the path going past the | | MOVs. In general, about 50% will go each way. That can vary at higher | | frequencies. " That sure sounds like 50% of the surge is going through the MOV and the other 50% is going on past it to the protected equipment. And that I would have to agree with Bud on, it's phantasy physics, because if it were true, no type of surge protection would work, because it would only be 50% effective. -- |WARNING: Due to extreme spam, I no longer see any articles originating from *| | * * * * Google Groups. If you want your postings to be seen by more readers | | * * * * you will need to find a different place to post on Usenet. * * * * *| | Phil Howard KA9WGN (email for humans: first name in lower case at ipal.net) | |
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#177
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#178
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Tzortzakakis Dimitrios wrote:
Ο "Tantalust" έγραψε στο μήνυμα . .. "NB" wrote in message ... Who is W_TOM and why has he appeared in every single thread that has contained those keywords since 2001??? He an obsessive-compulsive disorder victim, apparently driven by some kind of bizarre fetish involving ground rods. What kind of ground rods? I prefer steel core, copper clad ones:-) I even have the special heavy hammer Can you trim W_tom with that?? Or is he incurable? |
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#179
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On May 6, 12:08*pm, "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: w_tom wrote: On May 4, 9:09 pm, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: * *The same thing we did in the studios and transmitter sites. *Use a combination of protection at the building's main disconnect, and individual protection at each critical device. *The only thing that I've lost in the last ten years was when lightning hit a huge pine tree, and cut the top half of it off. It landed on the ground right over the buried telephone line, and a second strike blew out the modem and MOV protection on the phone line. * You suffered damage from a lightning strike and call that effective protection? *Modems are most typically damaged by surges entering an AC mains. *Outgoing surge path would be the phone line to earth via a telco installed *'whole house' protector. *Damage from lightning is effective protection? *After spending how much for all those protectors, you call that protection? * *Where did I say HOW was protected? It was my second week at that station, and the chief engineer took off on a long overdue vacation. If you would learn to read, rather than just do mindless rants you wouldn't look so stupid. *At that time the building had a UFER ground, and a three phase protection system at the meter CTs. That didn't prevent the damage, as you claim it should. * Phone lines do not use MOV protectors. *Basic information that you would have learned if not wasting time insulting people. * *Sorry, _wacko_ but you are the one slinging insults and ignoring proof from hundreds of people. *MOVs have too much capacitance. *Phone line 'whole house' protectors use other technologies with lower capacitance. * *Gee, _wacko_ you've never seen ANY modern business telephone equipment? *Gas tubes are fragile and very expensive. The protection isn't to save the privately owned telephones, it it to limit damage to the building. *Even that mid '60s 1A2 system had every output of the power supply fused to prevent a fire. Explain why an MOV's capacitance is high enough to affect a phone line. Never mind. *I have a Nitsuko/NEC DX2NA-32SYTEMEM KEY TELEPHONE SYSTEM in front of me, and every CO line in it has a MOV across the line. *Once more, you're preaching lies and using deceit to try to make others look bad. ,http://refurbishednitsuko.net/productInfo.aspx?productID=75978489-9ac.... is the Central Office line card for four telephone lines. See the black MOVs to the right of each pair of fuses? http://refurbishednitsuko.net/productInfo.aspx?productID=f5453e33-047.... is the card for four standard 2500 type telephones, or equivalent equipment. See the pairs of black MOVs over the blue connectors at the bottom of the screen? They are all japanese, with no brand markings. http://www.epcos.com/web/generator/Web/Sections/Publications/PDF/SIOV... is the Epcos MOV databook, with datasheets for Telecom applications. page 213 list the TELECOM MOV data. * *Every line into that studio building had a long distance call device diverter in the line that had MOV across the phone line. Every one of them survived the direct hit to the building and STL tower. That's more than can be said of your ability to use reason, and learn new things. * *You need to get your head out of 1920 and learn modern electronics. The one thing we learned today is that you don't know any more about Telecom that you do lightning protection, or reading comprehension. W_ denies MOVs are commonly used in typical electonics or modern appliances too. He had to, because he can't answer the obvious question of how MOVs can be used effectively in these applications, yet they can't work in plug-in protectors and the only way to get any protection is to have a nearby direct earth ground. Faced with the problem of MOVs providing protection in electronics/appliance without an earthground, he simply denies MOVs are used in electronics and appliances. Here's the references that I provvided him on that one: Here, from Appliance Magazine and Appliance Design websites: http://www.appliancedesign.com/CDA/A.../BNP_GUID_9-5-... "New thermally enhanced MOVs help protect a wide variety of low-power systems against damage caused by over-current, over-temperature and over-voltage faults, including lightning strikes, electrostatic discharge (ESD) surges, loss of neutral, incorrect input voltage and power induction. These devices help provide protection in a wide range of AC line applications, including AC mains LED lighting systems, PLC network adapters, cell-phone chargers, AC/DC power supplies (up to 30 VA as input power for 230 VAC input voltage), modem power supplies, AC panel protection modules, AC power meters, and home appliances. " http://www.appliancemagazine.com/pri...zone=1&first=1 "Protecting increasingly sophisticated and complex control boards from misconnection, power surges, or short circuit damage is of particular concern to the equipment manufacturer. Although appliance transformers, their enclosures, and connections are capable of withstanding higher voltage transients, the use of sensitive solid- state devices on the board necessitates improved overcurrent, overtemperature, and overvoltage control. Coordinating overcurrent and overvoltage protection can also help designers comply with safety agency requirements, minimize component count, and improve equipment reliability. A metal oxide varistor (MOV) overvoltage protection device used in a coordinated circuit- protection strategy with a line-voltage-rated PPTC overcurrent device helps manufacturers meet IEC 6100-4-5, the global standard for voltage and current test conditions for equipment connected to ac mains." |
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#180
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In article , bud--
writes Martzloff has written "the impedance of the grounding system to 'true earth' is far less important than the integrity of the bonding of the various parts of the grounding system." Indeed. This is an important principle of the UK wiring code. It's referred to as "equipotential bonding." Such a concept, of course, would be far beyond the understanding of w_'s lone brain cell. -- (\__/) Bunny says NO to Windows Vista! (='.'=) http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut00...ista_cost.html (")_(") http://www.cypherpunks.to/~peter/vista.pdf |
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