Ezio3.1415
My question is how does current flow in the primary coil then?
Good observation on zero resistance...
Do they still teach this while still assuming sine wave voltage? Sine waves are a special case, mathematically.
Does it help you to think of voltage as a sine function, and current as ∫sin ?
Draw both on a scrap of graph paper, time on horizontal like an oscilloscope..
Observe that over course of a cycle they aren't always same polarity .
From that you can visualize voltage sometimes aiding and sometimes opposing current flow...
so their product(power) alternates positive and negative. That's saying energy cycles back and forth between source and inductor...
That's why no heat is dissipated in the inductor it's just swapped to somewhere else..
It helped me to draw a graph of volts, amps and power over a complete sinewave cycle, observing the above...
It would sound very unscientific to say
"...cosine shaped current sneaks in while sine shaped voltage aids it, and is yanked back out by nape of neck while opposed...",,,
but if it helps you past this stumbling block you don't ever have to admit you stooped so low..
Key point is this - induction doesn't oppose current, it opposes
Change of current di/dt,,
AND Sinewaves are that special case where f(t), f'(t) and ∫f(t) all have exact same shape.
So it's not intuitive what is going on.
If this just clouds the matter, disregard. But it helped me.
old jim