Jon B said:
The resistance mentioned is more for DC current than for high Voltage AC.
I would have thought quite the contrary. Since the resistance is specified for a wire carrying high voltage AC, then presumably that is what it is for! The DC resistance may well be lower, but that is irrelevant in this context.
Jon B said:
The P=V2/R formula assumes the current density is uniform in the conductor, it's not always true in practical situations. This formula is good for approximation for long thin conductors.
Again, I would think in this context that P=V
2/R (or rather I
2R) applied exactly to the power, current and resistance quoted at the stated voltage..
It does not assume any particular current distribution across the area of the conductor: provided the resistance is measured at the frequency used (which is not a term in the formula) then the formula is valid for any length of wire.
Jon B said:
However this formula is not exact for High Voltage alternating current (AC), because the skin effect inhibits current flow near the center of the conductor.
I can't think of any mechanism, including skin effect, which changes the value of resistance for High Voltage.
If the values (of power and resistance) are correct at low voltage, then the same value of resistance will give the correct result at high voltage.
Jon B said:
The geometrical cross-section is different from the effective cross-section in which current actually flows, so the resistance is higher than expected.
I'm not sure what the "expected" resistance is here. If someone has either measured or calculated the resistance at 50Hz, presumably that is what they expect and that is what it is.
Jon B said:
So the R in P=V2/R becomes less relevant and P=VA is more accurate.
This is a puzzle. It may depend on how you define (and measure) V and A? It seems to me that I
2R is the definitive quantity for power dissipated in the resistance of the wire, however I is measured. Then both V
2/R and VI are equivalent to it when you define V as IR, rather than making an independent measurement of V.
Certainly if you try to measure V, rather than calculating it from IR, you will have to determine the phase angle between voltage and current. But even that will not solve all problems when the current is not sinusoidal.
Jon B said:
Who knows what the value of R is? Also, there other types of losses that make R irrelevant.
I hope the designers have carefully calculated the resistance from the physical properties of the wire and verified that by measuring test specimens.
I would be interested to hear what other losses there are and how they compare with I
2R in the wire. I suppose like our water supply, maybe a significant part of the supplied current never reaches the load and power is lost to I
2R in the earth? Is this why we no longer hear of attempts to engineer superconducting grid cables?
My own impression had been that I
2R losses in the cables were significant and increasing due to greater distortions in the load waveform.