Can anybody give a brief practical explanation of motor power factors / phase diagrams etc.
This is my understanding so far: for a purely inductive load the current peaks 90 degrees after the voltage peak on the sin wave and this would give a power factor of 1. The problem is that motors aren't purely inductive loads and so the 90 degrees goes out the window. This affects the power wave and means that more work goes into the motor in terms of V & I than you get out of it in KW.
Can anybody explain further?
What are the practical implications?
This is my understanding so far: for a purely inductive load the current peaks 90 degrees after the voltage peak on the sin wave and this would give a power factor of 1. The problem is that motors aren't purely inductive loads and so the 90 degrees goes out the window. This affects the power wave and means that more work goes into the motor in terms of V & I than you get out of it in KW.
Can anybody explain further?
What are the practical implications?