Nah, I hired an electrician to handle all that for me. Now if I want electricity all I have to do is stick a plug in a socket, or flip a switch. It's way more convenient.
Not exactly. There's a ratio of RPMs of the drive motor to the specific input of the alternator that generates the correct frequency. It depends on the way the alternator is designed (ie number of poles) that will yield the correct frequency, almost like a gear ratio, that is optimized for efficiency, and power plants have to constantly make slight adjustments to the drive motor speed the keep the frequency exact (usually done automatically within the drive control system).
I've never seen frequency be an issue in a residential system, but in theory it could happen.
It used to be common for clocks to be driven directly off the electrical frequency. The US Navel Observatory would call up generator plants and tell them to slow down or speed up a little to make a correction to all the clocks. I'm not sure if that still happens, though.
I've heard that trope before, same reason clocks in US schools/govt institutions were always plugged into a wall, hence these. Nowadays, NTP has rendered that obsolete.
I don't know how it's in 60Hz regions, but here the generators are in 3 phases, 120 degrees apart. The voltage gets transformed to up to 400kV, still in 3 phases, and then down to 400V when it's distributed to peoples' homes. Then you can pull 400V 3-phase or 230V 1-phase from your wall.
It's the same here, though we have varying degrees of transmission and distribution voltages via transformers and regulators. In my area, power comes into our valley from the 500kv lines through the open desert, into the valley at 33kv, and stepped down to 5kv for neighborhood distribution that the single phase 240/120v transformers tap off for the EOL.
More of what I was getting at was that generation is more or less the same across regions. Some external fuel source (whether it's diesel, natural gas, nuclear, steam, etc) does its thing to drive a rotor that's connected into an alternator which is essentially an electric motor but instead of the electric motor doing the driving, it's being driven which generates power, and the RPMs of whatever given fueled drive mechanism are not necessarily 1:1 with the alternator speed.
My understanding is that if electrical demand starts outstripping supply the sinewave can start getting badly mishapen.
From watching videos about synthesizers and playing with VCV Rack I've learned far more about waveforms than I ever did from any electrical education or research
Yeah you are. You can’t use electricity without it.
This is a DC only household
Shut up Thomas, Nikola won!
Well, actually...
From the first sentence:
So, actually actually. ;)
How do you run your appliances?
I don't, I'm actually Amish. I'm writing to you from a steam powered thinking machine
TIL I'm an HTML developer because I'm surfing on the internet
The meme said they didn’t use it not that they didn’t apply it.
You use HTML but don't develop in html when surfing web
Nah, I hired an electrician to handle all that for me. Now if I want electricity all I have to do is stick a plug in a socket, or flip a switch. It's way more convenient.
If the power into your house is off from 60Hz (or 50 depending on your region), an electrician isn't going to do diddly.
Neither am I cause I don't know what that means.
How could it be off frequecy at house level? Aren't the generators at the powerplants being spun at 50 or 60 times a second?
Not exactly. There's a ratio of RPMs of the drive motor to the specific input of the alternator that generates the correct frequency. It depends on the way the alternator is designed (ie number of poles) that will yield the correct frequency, almost like a gear ratio, that is optimized for efficiency, and power plants have to constantly make slight adjustments to the drive motor speed the keep the frequency exact (usually done automatically within the drive control system).
I've never seen frequency be an issue in a residential system, but in theory it could happen.
It used to be common for clocks to be driven directly off the electrical frequency. The US Navel Observatory would call up generator plants and tell them to slow down or speed up a little to make a correction to all the clocks. I'm not sure if that still happens, though.
I've heard that trope before, same reason clocks in US schools/govt institutions were always plugged into a wall, hence these. Nowadays, NTP has rendered that obsolete.
I don't know how it's in 60Hz regions, but here the generators are in 3 phases, 120 degrees apart. The voltage gets transformed to up to 400kV, still in 3 phases, and then down to 400V when it's distributed to peoples' homes. Then you can pull 400V 3-phase or 230V 1-phase from your wall.
It's the same here, though we have varying degrees of transmission and distribution voltages via transformers and regulators. In my area, power comes into our valley from the 500kv lines through the open desert, into the valley at 33kv, and stepped down to 5kv for neighborhood distribution that the single phase 240/120v transformers tap off for the EOL.
More of what I was getting at was that generation is more or less the same across regions. Some external fuel source (whether it's diesel, natural gas, nuclear, steam, etc) does its thing to drive a rotor that's connected into an alternator which is essentially an electric motor but instead of the electric motor doing the driving, it's being driven which generates power, and the RPMs of whatever given fueled drive mechanism are not necessarily 1:1 with the alternator speed.
My understanding is that if electrical demand starts outstripping supply the sinewave can start getting badly mishapen.
From watching videos about synthesizers and playing with VCV Rack I've learned far more about waveforms than I ever did from any electrical education or research