When they teach you electrical circuit forumulas, generally one assumes that the formulas are "clean", ie" V=I*R*cos theta, end of story.
I had one factory owner call me and say he was having power problems, and that we needed to find out why, since we designed the electrical system.
The power company came out, and put recording meters in two places for a week.
After a week, the power company said "There are no power company problems".
We said "Can we see the captured data?".
They said yes, and showed us a recorded screen graph.
That was an eye opener.
I had never seen so much voltage fluctuation, spiking, etc. in my life, and I realized there is a LOT of noise and spiking going on in a power system.
The Owner said "Ah haaaaaaah, proof that the utility company is causing my electrical problems".
The power company guy said "Wrong, this is normal. We sell you power at X cents per kwh, and guarantee + - 10 voltage swing maximum; so we are well within this criteria".
This was nearly a 1 million sq.ft. facility, so I asked the manager to show me exactly which equipment he was having trouble with.
He showed me a PLC cabinet.
I asked him to show me a PLC cabinet that he was not having trouble with, and that cabinet had a Sola voltage regulator on the 120VAC feeding the PLC.
I asked him "Where is the voltage regulator on the cabinet you are having problems with?"
He said "We did not put one on that cabinet".
I said "Put a voltage regulator on all PLC cabinets, and stop calling me about power distribution problems; you don't have power distribution problems; you have normal voltage swings and voltage drops".
So the mathematical forumulas get you in the ballpark as far as understanding the fundamentals current flow and voltage, but as Bob Shores points out, there may be more than meets the eye going on behind the scenes.
Utility company power distribution systems distribute bulk power, but it is dirty.
A plant power distribution system needs multiple levels of voltage-clamping surge protection, and often need voltage regulators on sensitive electronics.
And VFD's need in input reactor to prevent harmonics being fed back into the power sytem, and an output dv/dt filter, to prevent spiking the motor windings and the motor feeder.
I recall the power company use to superimpose a high frequency signal on their power lines, and use that for communications.
It is surprising all the things you can do with electricity.
Here are the ignition items I purchases for the Ball Hopper Monitor.
I don't like electronic ignition systems because if the electonic module fails, there is no repairing it.
For a car, electronic ignition is the best way.
For a model engine, I will stick with the old-school material.
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