Ok, so p.f. correction is supposed to be a gimmie question, and I thought I had this nailed down, but apparently not. From what I can tell, the NCEES problems stop once you determine the VAR necessary to raise the p.f. I found a problem that wants the total capacitance. It is Camara sample exam 1 problem 10. I won't post it b/c I'm not sure about copywrite issues and such.
Basically, Camara and I agree up to the point where we decide we need a total of -150VAR from a 3-phase capacitor. He asks for the total capacitance. The way I have always done it was Q=-2*pi*f*C*V^2. That is "Vars equals 2pi time frequency times capacitance times RMS voltage squared). Simply move everything on the right under the Q and solve for C. Done. But apparently I may be wrong.
Camara says Q = root3*V^2/Xc, solves for Xc and then converts reactance to capacitance. That root3 is what I have a problem with. Ive never seen it before in that formula. Also, the problem didn't specify whether the capacitors would be connected in delta or wye.
I've always used the formula: C = (Qadd)/(2*pi*f*V^2) and always got the problems right. What's the issue here?
Basically, Camara and I agree up to the point where we decide we need a total of -150VAR from a 3-phase capacitor. He asks for the total capacitance. The way I have always done it was Q=-2*pi*f*C*V^2. That is "Vars equals 2pi time frequency times capacitance times RMS voltage squared). Simply move everything on the right under the Q and solve for C. Done. But apparently I may be wrong.
Camara says Q = root3*V^2/Xc, solves for Xc and then converts reactance to capacitance. That root3 is what I have a problem with. Ive never seen it before in that formula. Also, the problem didn't specify whether the capacitors would be connected in delta or wye.
I've always used the formula: C = (Qadd)/(2*pi*f*V^2) and always got the problems right. What's the issue here?