Edison vs Westinghouse notes here (1 Viewer)

SmokedSalmon

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Thought u 2004 hscer's would like this for notes.

Edison vs Westinghouse

In the late nineteenth century, Edison favoured generating and supplying direct current (DC) electricity while Westinghouse promoted the use of alternating current (AC) electricity.

Edison had the initial advantage that the technology for generating DC was well established and DC worked well over short distances. However, DC could only be generated and distributed at the voltages at which it was used by consumers. This meant that currents in conductors were large, leading to huge and expensive energy losses over distances of more than one or two kilometres. To supply a large city required many power stations throughout the city and an unattractive proliferation of wires to carry the required current.

The great advantage of AC was that, through the use of transformers , the voltage could be stepped up or down as required. This meant that AC could be generated at moderately low voltages, stepped up to high voltages for transmission over great distances and stepped down again to lower voltages for consumers. The higher voltage meant that AC could be transmitted over greater distances than DC, with smaller energy losses. Power stations could be fewer and further apart and conductors could be lighter.

The economic advantages of AC, including the smaller energy losses and the economy of scale in needing fewer power stations further apart, along with the unattractive web of wires required for DC, supported Westinghouses solution to the supply of electricity over Edisons. AC received a boost in popularity with Teslas invention of the induction motor which operates only on AC.

Competition was not always open and fair. Edison had a vested interest in DC as he owned hundreds of DC power stations and all of his many electrical inventions to that time ran on DC. Edison attempted to prove that AC was very dangerous by electrocuting animals on stage and convincing authorities to use AC for the first electric chair. He resorted to legal tactics in an attempt to have AC banned and to prevent its use with his inventions. Edison seems to have unreasonably shunned AC electricity. AC eventually came to be the dominant form in which electricity is generated world-wide.

But DC has the advantage of not causing losses through electromagnetic radiation or magnetic induction. With solid-state switching it is now relatively simple to change between DC and AC at high or low voltages. High voltage DC transmission is now practicable. Scientists are striving to develop super-conducting wires for power transmission. If they do, DC could become the preferred current for long distance transmission. There is already a 500 kV DC submarine transmission line carrying 2800 MW over 50 km between the two islands of Shikoku and Kansai in Japan.
 

Xayma

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Originally posted by Komaticom
Three phase motors (huh?) powerful for industry use
AC disadvantages
Three coils are placed 60 degrees apart this means that they're out of phase by 60 degrees. This means that a constant voltage will be produced. If you look on the power lines you will see the 4 lower wires. One is an earth with 0V, the other three are 240V AC wires 60 degrees out of phase. Houses connect to one of them and to the earth. Industries connect to two of the live ones giving them 415V (which can be shown by vector addition)
 

zubsta

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three phase is used to produce a steady a.c(sorta) graph wise it does that thing where they overlap each other and make mmmmm making it steady......kinda sorry i forgot to rite terms lol.
therefor always keeping a high steady voltage
 

t-i-m-m-y

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nice stuff guys

04ers just remember u dont need to write ALL of it.
 

jenjf88

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thanks for the info it gave me a heads up to what i actually have to write about it
 

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