The life cycle of incandescent lamps is moot thanks to our
global warming concerns!


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
[email protected]
Sent: Monday, July 20, 2009 1:58 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [PSES] Normal power supply Sweden & Norway

Edison himself designed the US residential power system.  As inventor of
the light bulb he experimented with his carbon filament technology and
determined that an optimal filament required ~110V.  Recognizing that
distance was an issue for his DC generating stations, he designed a
system that used 220V with a center tap.  Inside a residence loads are
placed approximately half on each side of the supply.  The center tap
only has to carry the difference current to assure a steady 110 V on
each
side of the split.  This allowed it to be relatively light gauge which
saved on copper expense.  Heavy appliances simply bridge across the full
220V supply.  So there you have it: the distance advantage of 220V
applied to 110V lamps.  Long ago a nation wide survey of household
voltages was taken, and the average was 117V.  This became the US
domestic standard, since rounded up to 120/240V.

On a side note, incandescent lamps last much longer on DC.  With AC you
have the slight but constant of temperature cycling on each half cycle
of
current, plus the slight but constant mechanical flexing by alternating
magnetic interaction with the earth's own field.  It can make a
difference whether the filament is north-south or east-west!

Orin Laney

On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 19:06:34 +0100 John Woodgate <[email protected]>
writes:
> In message 
> <[email protected]>, 
> dated 
> Mon, 20 Jul 2009, Ralph McDiarmid <[email protected]> 
> writes:
> 
> >Is it common throughout Europe to distribute 3-phase power to 
> >single-family homes? 
> 
> Not in UK. Elsewhere, yes, but I don't know about some countries, 
> such 
> as Portugal and Greece.
> 
> >  If so,  why are single-family  and duplex residences in North 
> America 
> >supplied with 120/240V single-phase?
> 
> Well, there is an interminable argument over whether that's single 
> phase 
> or two phase, not that it matters.
> 
> It seems that there are historical reasons. US decided to go for a 
> low 
> voltage, high current principle, while Europe went the other way, 
> with a 
> factor of 2. Maybe the difference in prices of copper in 1910 (?) 
> was a 
> factor? Or the Edison/Tesla controversy?
> 
> Consistent with that, US distribution technique is to carry MV close 
> to 
> customers and feed only a few, at high current, from one MV/LV 
> transformer. In Europe, MV/LV transformers are typically 500 MW and 
> feed 
> hundreds of customers.
> -- 
> OOO - Own Opinions Only. Try www.jmwa.demon.co.uk and 
> www.isce.org.uk
> Things can always get better. But that's not the only option.
> John Woodgate, J M Woodgate and Associates, Rayleigh, Essex UK
> 
> -
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