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Discuss Eddy current clarification in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
I hope you have many 100's amps available in your workshop!
Not borne out by John Ward's video, or Julie's experience. I'm just perplexed now!Nope, and shouldn't need much current either.
I recall Lucien mentioning that he made a simple square of conduit with a lampholder in the middle of one side and a mains input opposite it which got very warm with the live routed through one side and the neutral through the other with just a 100W lamp in it.
I guess the other side of that is it might add some impedance to the system due to inductance, making the AC R2 a bit higher than the DC one measured during dead testing to verify conductors are properly speced and installed.Yes it does, I think this is down to the fact a lot of current can flow through it under fault conditions.
Not borne out by John Ward's video, or Julie's experience. I'm just perplexed now!
Ah! OK - Sorry I didn't get that at all. Re-reading your post I see what you mean. Thanks.But both of those examples are cables passing through steel plates whereas I was talking about cables passing through a few feet of steel conduit.
I always thought they had the same effect on brass as I was once told brass bushes wouldn’t prevent the issue or is that because the brass bushes are drilled and fitted to the steel casing of a distribution board?Eddy currents are a real thing, I have seen several instances of damage by them.
The worst case was on the LV box of a 2MW transformer, four conductors per phase all neatly grouped by the phase and taken through a steel plate. The paint on the plate had burnt off around the cables and discoloured the steel. We changed the gland plate to brass to solve the problem. Interestingly at the other end the singles were again taken through steel into the switch board but there was no sign of heating, I think this was due to the singles being taken in randomly rather than bunched in phase groups.
As said above there will always be induced currents from singles but it is much worse if they pass through ferrous metal. In another case we had four singles passing through a steel plate, again there was signs of heating. This was solved by cutting a slot to link the four holes (which were in a line) then brazing it shut again to retain strength. The brass in the brazed joint was enough to prevent further eddy current damage.
It is conductive but not magnetic. The braze stops the magnetic circuit and forces the magnetic flux from all the cores to go around all four cores. The sum of all the cores should be zero so there is no magnetic flux left to induce currents.would not a brazed up slot still count as a shorted turn of a transformer os sorts?
You are correct. Brass bushes in a steel plate will not make any difference. You have to look at the magnetic circuit, all the cores have to pass through the same hole in any ferrous material.always thought they had the same effect on brass as I was once told brass bushes wouldn’t prevent the issue or is that because the brass bushes are drilled and fitted to the steel casing of a distribution board?
That is correct, A changing magnetic flux will induce current in a conductor, but by putting all the cores through the on hole in a ferrous material the magnetic fluxes cancel out, hence no induced current.I thought any conductive material in a moving magnetic field will induce a voltage.
Magnetic flux is a thing but it's the moving flux or conductor moving though a magnetic field that induces a voltage.
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