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John Larkin
 
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Default Estimating the Number of Turns of an Inductor

On Sun, 6 Jun 2004 16:30:39 -0400, "BFoelsch"
wrote:

It's interesting, when I learned this stuff ( I won't tell you when, but my
then-new text was published in 1935!), albeit in the context of
utility/power engineering, about the LAST thing we learned was the tricks
and conventions about turns ratios, etc.

Just looking at a question in my book:

"Assuming a coil of thus & so dimensions surrounding a core of this &
that dimension & type of material, calculate: 1) The flux in the core, 2)
the flux in the air," etc.

Follow-up question:

"Assuming a second identical coil placed elsewhere on the core, calculate
induced voltage if only the flux in the iron passes through the second
coil," etc.


I had to take a year of Electrical Machinery in college, including
labs with big transformers and motors and stuff. I learned a lot from
it.

The whole text was written like that. The concept of a "perfect
transformer" was introduced much later, and only in certain contexts. For
utility purposes, perfect transformers are undesirable!


Is that because they conduct short circuits too well?

John


 
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