Trouble with calculating 3 Phase Power

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating power in a three-phase system, specifically in relation to measuring equipment and methods used to obtain accurate power readings from furnaces. Participants explore the implications of measurement techniques on power factor and total power calculations.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant describes their setup using a scope with a current clamp and voltage probe, questioning the accuracy of the power reading due to the voltage measurement being line-to-line.
  • Another participant suggests that the line-to-line voltage measurement could lead to an anomalous power factor reading, potentially affecting the phase angle and overall power calculations.
  • A specific calculation is provided by a participant, indicating that the true phase angle should be adjusted by 30 degrees, leading to a different power factor and total power output than initially calculated.
  • A participant inquires whether referencing the voltage probe from neutral instead of line-to-line would yield more accurate results, and questions the impact of referencing to earth.
  • Discussion includes a formula for calculating three-phase power, emphasizing the need for balanced loads and the relationship between kVA, kW, and power factor.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the accuracy of the initial power readings and the implications of measurement methods. There is no consensus on the best approach to obtain accurate power calculations, and multiple competing views remain regarding the effects of measurement techniques.

Contextual Notes

Participants acknowledge assumptions such as balanced loads and equal currents, but these conditions are not universally agreed upon. The discussion also highlights potential errors in power factor readings due to measurement setup.

roro36
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Hi,

I think I am correct, but just wanted to check. We have some furnaces and I want to work out what power they run at. I have a scope with a current clamp and voltage probe. I have set the scope to read out power and power factor. That is where my problem lies, I think. I should have set it to voltage and pf and read the current off an aditional meter? In any event. It has worked out the power for me. What I want to know, is what is this power value referring to? I attached a drawing that I have used to try and understand it in my head.

Because I have connected the voltage probe to read Line-Line, ie ~400V, the power that it is reading is effectively P=VI*pf.. But it is a 3 phase system. So because I set the voltage probe acoss Line-Line, I need to multiply this Power value by root3 to get the power of the machine. If i had set the voltage probe to read Line-Neutral, I would multiply the power reading by 3? I know I have assume equal currents and that the meter is working out single phase Power I think, the setting just says Power and says Voltage Probe A, Current Probe B.

Please let me know if this correct.
 

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Without knowing the specifics of you scope/meter I think that you may get an anomalous power factor reading due to the voltage measurement being line to line. That is, (unless the scope/meter somehow knows this and is correcting for it), the line to line voltage measurement will throw off the phase angle by 30 degrees.

If you have L1,L2,L3 labeled correctly in that phase sequence, then your voltage measurement will lead by 30 degrees, giving a reported power factor of 0.866 (current lagging) even if the actual power factor was unity!

I think you'd need to first correct for this error in the reported pf and then multiply by sqrt(3) to get the total power, assuming a balanced load of course.
 
So to be specific, with you're example measurements of 400V 120A and pf=0.8. I would calculate the true phase angle as \cos^{-1}(0.8) - 30 = 6.9 degrees, and hence find the true power factor of about 0.99.

Using these value I get a total 3 phase power of approx 82KW as opposed to the 66kW you calculate.
 
Last edited:
Thanks, I understand what you are saying. It would then be best to redo the test making sure the probe was referenced from Neutral. Would it make any difference if it were referenced to earth?
 
If the phases are balanced, ie equal currents in all 3,
then
kva 3 phase = Vline X Iline X sqrt(3)
and kw = kva X pf
and at unity pf there'll be 30 degrees between line-to-line volts and line amps

an oven i would expect to be resistive hence unity pf

do your measurements look like a balanced resistive load?
 

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