Transformer resistance test |
Flournoy's assignment was to rewrite an original by Alexander Rudinski, whose BS was in communications. Definitely a "BS," given that what Alex wrote was utter bull. You'd think that in the process of performing a rewrite, however, Blake would have corrected some of the misstatements and fixed the crap. But no: they merely freshened the prose a bit, leaving in such intellectual dross as,
- "Transformers are electrical devices used to transfer electrical energy between two or more circuits." – No, they're devices used to change voltage.
- "The resistance of an alternating current (AC) transformer is held within the wires wound around its core." – Lifted almost word for word from Rudinski... the resistance is a function of a) the natural resistance of the wire and b) any leakage due to failure of the insulation, short circuits, etc.
- "...a transformer... uses alternating current (AC) to increase or decrease the voltage of the electrical energy running through it..." – No, a transformer uses induction in accordance with Faraday's Law.
- "To test your transformer, simply touch the red and black pins of your ohmmeter to the opposite ends of the transformer's wiring." – Ummm, which are the "opposite ends"? Here, Blake, read this...
- "...compare the resistance on your ohmmeter to the resistance stated on the transformer's data sheet." – Just an FYI, Blake (and Alex): resistance transformer is calculated by measuring the voltage drop, not the absolute impedance. You then use Ohm's Law to calculate the resistance, which should be compared to the nominal Z% on the nameplate.
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SI - ELECTRICAL
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