vintageplayer said:
I know it's S. If S is capable of quantifying the circulating volt-amps on top of your average power, what is the utility of defining an additional quantity, Q and calling it the reactive power?
No, S is NOT capable of that
and maybe there's the miscommunication
what do you mean by "circulating" ? To us power guys "circulating amps" are reactive because they circulate between machines.
If you've never had control of two machines in parallel you cannot imagine the sense of wonder when tweaking
one voltage regulator makes amps go up or down on
both machines. The load doesn't need to accept those amps, they just circulate between the generators.S doesn't separate out of phase volt-amps from in phase volt amps
S is the hypotenuse as pointed out by Hesch in post #2
in my power plant,
P i control by how much steam i admit to Mr Turbine and my wattmeter shows me P
Q i control by how much field current i apply to Mr Generator and my varmeter shows me Q
I don't have a S meter but i do have ammeters in series with the armature windings, which, at constant voltage are an indication of S ,
and i have voltmeters between phases ,
and for a sanity check on my instruments
at constant load (constant megawatts)
...i can adjust excitation to give minimum armature amps which means there's no reactive current
... then i verify varmeter reports zero and that's my zero check on Q meter (varmeter)
...and i verify my wattmeter reports VI√3, that's my check on S .
but of course i'd have to co-ordinate that testing with system dispatcher and nearby power plants so as to not upset the grid.
That's my utility guy perspective. The lingo is well established and is the dialect that's understood in my circles.
Reactive demand on the system is set by what is connected to the system
generators supplying that reactive demand share the reactive current amongst themselves , each supplying its share,
by means of adjusting their field currents individually
raising one machines' field current will affect armature amps on all nearby machines
Changing the language will not be well received. Utilities are just that way.