C
Carlos E.R.
Guest
On 2022-11-18 00:09, Bob F wrote:
Yes, true. But in this case, the losses using AC per kilometre are much
lower, so the length at which DC becomes economical above ground is much
greater than under ground or under water.
It is simply a question of calculating all the costs and deciding which
one turns cheaper.
--
Cheers, Carlos.
On 11/17/2022 11:20 AM, Carlos E.R. wrote:
On 2022-11-17 20:03, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sun, 13 Nov 2022 10:48:31 -0000, The Natural Philosopher
tnp@invalid.invalid> wrote:
On 12/11/2022 21:22, Carlos E.R. wrote:
On 2022-11-12 15:17, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Sat, 12 Nov 2022 13:39:00 -0000, Carlos E.R.
robin_listas@es.invalid> wrote:
On 2022-11-12 14:22, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Fri, 11 Nov 2022 17:55:38 -0000, rick
rick_hughes@_remove_btconnect.com> wrote:
On 06/11/2022 14:23, Commander Kinsey wrote:
Instead of rolling blackouts when there\'s a power
shortage, why don\'t we just allow (or deliberately) the
voltage and frequency to drop? Wouldn\'t that make a lot
of devices use less?
It is a legal requirement to keep the frequency at 50Hz
over a set period. Therefore if it lags at any point they
have to increase to catch up.
This was a legal requirement due to mains clocks.
But you can drop it to 49 for a while then put it up to 51
when there\'s plenty power.
And do it in the entire Europe, simultaneously?
We\'re linked by DC, so no.
Wrong.
Yes, the European mainland grid whilst it is not all of Europe, is
synchronised. I believe Norway, the UK and Ireland, are definietly
totally separate.
I thought there was a problem with capacitance sending AC a long
distance, hence DC to the UK? Yet they\'re managing AC throughout
most of Europe?
There is a problem with capacitance and inductance sending high voltage
underground or undersea for significant distances, which DC doesn\'t have.
More power can be sent through above ground lines too with DC than with AC.
Yes, true. But in this case, the losses using AC per kilometre are much
lower, so the length at which DC becomes economical above ground is much
greater than under ground or under water.
It is simply a question of calculating all the costs and deciding which
one turns cheaper.
--
Cheers, Carlos.