packdad
Mechanical
- Mar 7, 2001
- 71
Help out a lowly mechanical guy! I'm learning about PI tests and have a couple questions:
1. What, exactly, is going on in the windings as the PI test is conducted? From what I understand, there are several different types of currents being generated by the test: Current due to capacitance charging (time dependent), polarization current (time dependent), and leakage current (steady). Of these three, I only have a good grasp of the last one! Capacitance I can sort of understand -- sort of. But what, exactly, is polarization current? I guess I thought that polarization current WAS the capacitance current, but apparently I was wrong.
2. The acceptable value for a PI test is 2. Why? Does a value less than this indicate that leakage current, which is clearly bad, is dominant? I think there is an IEEE standard which might explain this, but I don't have the number or a reference source.
Thanks!
1. What, exactly, is going on in the windings as the PI test is conducted? From what I understand, there are several different types of currents being generated by the test: Current due to capacitance charging (time dependent), polarization current (time dependent), and leakage current (steady). Of these three, I only have a good grasp of the last one! Capacitance I can sort of understand -- sort of. But what, exactly, is polarization current? I guess I thought that polarization current WAS the capacitance current, but apparently I was wrong.
2. The acceptable value for a PI test is 2. Why? Does a value less than this indicate that leakage current, which is clearly bad, is dominant? I think there is an IEEE standard which might explain this, but I don't have the number or a reference source.
Thanks!