D
Don Kelly
Guest
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<phil-news-nospam@ipal.net> wrote in message
news:g0dt3601543@news4.newsguy.com...
both windings leading to losses and heating due to circulating currents. In
addition, there would be shifts in the load sharing between the two
secondaries- with the possibility of overloading one of them. Also, you
still haven't solved the problem of switching the current from one tap to
another Note also to shift 2% you would have to make two 2% shifts, one on
each winding so that you are essentially doubling the work and tap changing
equipment while introducing other problems as Daestrom has indicated.
-
--
Don Kelly dhky@shawcross.ca
remove the X to answer
<phil-news-nospam@ipal.net> wrote in message
news:g0dt3601543@news4.newsguy.com...
So you have a differential voltage producing a circulating current throughIn alt.engineering.electrical Don Kelly <dhky@shaw.ca> wrote:
| Yes -you are shorting a part of the winding but the switching is a bit
more
| complex than that so that short circuit currents are limited to
reasonable
| values. It is a multistep operation with reactor switching. On-load tap
| changers are expensive and are generally limited to applications where
this
| is absolutely needed (I have seen one where the tap changer was nearly
as
| large as the transformer).
What about multiple parallel transformers, or at least multiple parallel
windings on the same core (on whichever side the tapping is to be done),
where the taps are stepped incrementally on each winding? Instead of a
shorted winding segment, you'd have windings of differing voltage in
parallel as each of the windings change their taps one at a time.
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both windings leading to losses and heating due to circulating currents. In
addition, there would be shifts in the load sharing between the two
secondaries- with the possibility of overloading one of them. Also, you
still haven't solved the problem of switching the current from one tap to
another Note also to shift 2% you would have to make two 2% shifts, one on
each winding so that you are essentially doubling the work and tap changing
equipment while introducing other problems as Daestrom has indicated.
-
--
Don Kelly dhky@shawcross.ca
remove the X to answer