Szar
Commander of the Legion of the Unholy Pear
Greetings.
I am missing something fundamental in regards to developing the equations for the two watt metering method. I can develop the phasor diagrams that depict the voltages and currents and the phase angles between them, see attached.
As I interpret the completed phasor diagram, "Ia" leads "Vac" and "Ib" lags "Vab" prior to considering power factor created from load reactance. When considering PF, the currents should rotate counter-clockwise (assuming an inductive load) with the origin as the base point for rotation. Also as I understand it, when the load is inductive this should always increase the angle between "Vbc" and "Ib". For "Vab" and "Ia" the angle will initially decrease until the current eventually changes from leading to lagging. As such, the terms I develop are cos(Ø-30°) and cos(Ø+30°), for watt meter 1 and 2 respectively.
Where I am finding difficulty is how the equation becomes cos(30°-Ø) and cos(30°+Ø) for watt meter 1 and 2 as is commonly shown online.
Any assistance would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
PS. My apologies for the poor penmanship.
I am missing something fundamental in regards to developing the equations for the two watt metering method. I can develop the phasor diagrams that depict the voltages and currents and the phase angles between them, see attached.
As I interpret the completed phasor diagram, "Ia" leads "Vac" and "Ib" lags "Vab" prior to considering power factor created from load reactance. When considering PF, the currents should rotate counter-clockwise (assuming an inductive load) with the origin as the base point for rotation. Also as I understand it, when the load is inductive this should always increase the angle between "Vbc" and "Ib". For "Vab" and "Ia" the angle will initially decrease until the current eventually changes from leading to lagging. As such, the terms I develop are cos(Ø-30°) and cos(Ø+30°), for watt meter 1 and 2 respectively.
Where I am finding difficulty is how the equation becomes cos(30°-Ø) and cos(30°+Ø) for watt meter 1 and 2 as is commonly shown online.
Any assistance would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
PS. My apologies for the poor penmanship.