S
Silly Sausage
I found this somewhere else.
What do you reckon?
WARNING - Don't waste too much time on it, just something to exercise the brain with!
Note, the lamps are constant power.
I had to calculate something today, and I got completely stumped. What bugs me is that I cannot work out how to do this, but I'm sure that about 20 years ago I would have known. In the end I just added in enough of a safety factor that it didn't matter, but I'm curious about how you'd go about solving it...
I have a long pair of wires with lamps on them, and the resistance is significant. So, each lamp gets a lower voltage as you get further from the EMF. This drop is not linear, because each section of cable carries less current the further you go, because it's supplying fewer lamps.
I need to find the PD at the last lamp.
If each lamp is a constant current, then this is trivial.
For example, 100V supply with 10 lamps each drawing 1A. Each wire section is 1 Ohm. Lamp 1 gets 90V, because the first section carries 10A. Lamp 2 gets 90V-9*1 = 81V as the second section carries 9A. And so on.
The trouble is, my lamps are constant power. So, the current increases as the voltage drops. Lamp 1 would draw 1.11A at 90V, but it doesn't get 90V, because all the lamps are drawing more current as they are getting a lower voltage. Every lamp current depends on the voltage that all the others are getting.
I reckon this can be solved, something to do with differential equations or series. Anyone know?
What do you reckon?
WARNING - Don't waste too much time on it, just something to exercise the brain with!
Note, the lamps are constant power.
I had to calculate something today, and I got completely stumped. What bugs me is that I cannot work out how to do this, but I'm sure that about 20 years ago I would have known. In the end I just added in enough of a safety factor that it didn't matter, but I'm curious about how you'd go about solving it...
I have a long pair of wires with lamps on them, and the resistance is significant. So, each lamp gets a lower voltage as you get further from the EMF. This drop is not linear, because each section of cable carries less current the further you go, because it's supplying fewer lamps.
I need to find the PD at the last lamp.
If each lamp is a constant current, then this is trivial.
For example, 100V supply with 10 lamps each drawing 1A. Each wire section is 1 Ohm. Lamp 1 gets 90V, because the first section carries 10A. Lamp 2 gets 90V-9*1 = 81V as the second section carries 9A. And so on.
The trouble is, my lamps are constant power. So, the current increases as the voltage drops. Lamp 1 would draw 1.11A at 90V, but it doesn't get 90V, because all the lamps are drawing more current as they are getting a lower voltage. Every lamp current depends on the voltage that all the others are getting.
I reckon this can be solved, something to do with differential equations or series. Anyone know?