Hey guys,
PPI Exam 1 question 68 is about solving for a 1-phase, 2-wire distribution system's capacitive reactance per unit length. I tried to solve this using the NCEES-provided reference handbook.
In the NCEES reference handbook, the formula for average capacitance to neutral is given as:
C = 2 * pi * epsilon 0 / ln(D eq / GMR)
But the solution to this problem uses:
C = pi * epsilon 0 / ln(D / r)
Why is the capacitance formula different for a 1-phase, 2-wire system? Why does it not have the 2 multiplier? Why does it only use conductor radius instead of GMR?
Thanks for any input on this!
PPI Exam 1 question 68 is about solving for a 1-phase, 2-wire distribution system's capacitive reactance per unit length. I tried to solve this using the NCEES-provided reference handbook.
In the NCEES reference handbook, the formula for average capacitance to neutral is given as:
C = 2 * pi * epsilon 0 / ln(D eq / GMR)
But the solution to this problem uses:
C = pi * epsilon 0 / ln(D / r)
Why is the capacitance formula different for a 1-phase, 2-wire system? Why does it not have the 2 multiplier? Why does it only use conductor radius instead of GMR?
Thanks for any input on this!