peetey
Electrical
- Jan 10, 2005
- 42
I have a question about the current that the neutral carries under balanced 120v loads. I do realize that the neutral carries no current when there are 240v loads connected. I am pondering the 120v loads when they are exactly the same on L1 and L2. If I have 15 amps on line one and 15 amps on line two we say that the neutral carries zero current. I need to know what is going on when this condition occurs. I am assuming that the opposing currents cancel due to the math. At the molecular level is the currents still flowing but the devices we use to measure unable to discern the flow? Can we possible say that there is no current flowing in the neutral when there is definitely current flowing thru the hot phase? If I kill one of the loads the current magically appears. If the neutral carries zero current at balanced is it "NOT" fair to assume that the current bypasses the neutral altogether and flows through the companion load like what occurs in WYE under balanced three phase loading. I have an idea of the right answer but I need a more learned explanation.
Thanks Peetey
Thanks Peetey