abdo799 said:
he said he will refer it to secondary, then he said that V2= 230 and then he said he wanted to get V1' at full load and Pf of 1 and 0.8 , to get them he first got I2 by dividing Srated by 230 (V2) then he said that V1'= V2+I2*Zeq , but of course because the Pf is changing the angle of I2 is changing hence V1' is changing so he got for Pf =1 V1'= 232 V and for pf= 0.8 V1'= 234 V
Try thinking in one thought per line, like a computer program.
Referred to secondary is a hint he started at output side.
note z's get multiplied by square of turns ratio ,
so be careful when figuring your Zeq,,,
If R' and X' are referred to secondary, secondary ones are as measured but primary ones are X1/100 ...
with 234 volts at V1, core loss is more than with 230 volts at V1 ,
it's really that simple. But it conflicts with statement "core loss is constant" .
Define your model and be rigorous in applying laws of Ohm and Kirchoff.
abdo799 said:
then he asked for the efficiency at pf = 0.8 and full load so what he did was simply 234^2/Rc
Efficiency ?
What's Rc ?
234^2/Rc is core loss, or core plus R1 & R2 losses ?
Power input minus losses = power output, and efficiency is Pout/Pin.
abdo799 said:
and that's why i am asking this question, somethings like the Pf and the load ratio (X) can and will change V1 which will then change the core loss which i know is constant,
IF you're forcing output side voltage V2 to be constant , the math tells you V1 must change with load..
But to achieve that constant V2 you must apply a V1
that you can adjust when load changes ,
you'll see V1 change from 230 volts unloaded (as anorlunda said) to 234 volts as in your worked example
and
core loss at V1=230 volts IS NOT THE SAME as at V1=234 volts !
(Did professor plant that prior misconception?)
If professor insists that it is, show him this post. Print a copy for your backpack.
abdo799 said:
but the textbook author just uses whichever V1' suitable for the conditions given in the question which is the V1' at Pf=0.8 and X=1
Aha ! Textbook author shows that you can adjust V1 to get desired V2.
Transformers typically have taps in the windings so we can tweak the turns ratio slightly.
We select the tap that gives us comfortable voltage at the point of use.
He might be leading up to that subject.
Our main transformer had a 20.9 kv winding connected to a 22KV generator
the mismatch was to account for voltage loss across internal impedances of the transformer and still give 230KV on high side, which was " the grid ".
We adjusted generator voltage as required to deliver proper voltage to the grid.
I'm sensing too much haste in presenting this material.
Stick to your basics. You are obviously bright and will do fine if you keep your thinking to one simple step at a time.
@abdo799 Arrive at that test rested.