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Transmission Voltages

12/13/2011 3:52 AM

why we use transmission voltages as 11kv,33kv 66kv.instead of 10 20 or 30kv

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#1

Re: transmission voltages

12/13/2011 4:15 AM

For the same reason that Marshall guitar amplifiers have a volume control knob that goes to 11.

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#2

Re: transmission voltages

12/13/2011 5:47 AM
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Guru

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#3

Re: transmission voltages

12/13/2011 6:31 AM

Or why 4.16 or 13.8 kV or 345 kV to quote some USA 60 Hz values?

It is certainly history, but I have never heard an exact reason - there are probably many curious reasons which had an effect. The voltages you give originated in Britain. I think the original thought for 11 kV was about a nominal peak voltage of 15 kV, since insulators and line spacings are most affected by the peak voltage, then someone thought 15/√2 = 10.6 kV is a strange value, let us make it 11 kV. The availability of high voltage & power test equipment, say 50 kV or 500 kV to prove new switchgear set limits. The doubling or trebling for higher voltages is just that economies from higher voltage need a significant increase to be worthwhile.

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#4

Re: Transmission Voltages

12/14/2011 7:40 AM

If you people are not tired of asking this question, I am not tired of answering either. Come on! Have your answer:

Magic of the Mulitiples of 11

Foreword:

The author has been coming across the following question repeatedly from the participants in his training programmes. Many other electrical professionals and electrical engineering students would also be having the same question in their minds, but only hesitant to ask anybody. An attempt is made here by the author to answer this question.

Question: Why Transmission, distribution and utilization voltages are in multiples of 11, as in 110V, 220V, 440V, 1.1kV, 3.3kV, 6.6kV, 11kV, 22kV, 33kV, 66kV, 110kV, 132kV & 220kV?

Answer: It is true only with respect to AC power systems. The first known man-made source of electricity is a cell, which is DC in nature. But, after realizing the disadvantages of the DC electric equipments, AC Electricity generating machines were invented. When these AC Machines were developed, the power of these machines was to be compared with the already available DC electricity, as it is human tendency to compare anything new with the existing ones. As in the case of steam engines.

When steam engines were invented, the power of the steam engines was compared with that of the horses, which were the power sources before the invention of the steam engine.

So, a value called RMS Value for AC Electricity was derived which compared the effectiveness of the AC Electricity with that of the DC Electricity. This value is the Effective Value of AC Electricity. As we were more interested in knowing the effect of AC electricity, all measuring instruments were and are designed to measure only the RMS value of AC electricity - may it be Voltage, Current, Power, etc.

But, for the designer sitting in the design lab, more than the effective value, the average value over a period on one sinusoidal cycle of AC Electricity was important. So, he designed an AC electric Generator, which would produce, on an average, a voltage over a period of one cycle, of say, 10kV (10 is a round figure, you know).

But, when this machine was built to the design and put to operation and when the output voltage was measured, it was found to be 11kV, as the meter was measuring NOT the average value but the effective or the RMS value. This relation existed for any voltage. So, a factor was arrived at - relating the RMS value and the average value, called Form Factor, which is the ratio of RMS value to the Average value, which for a sinusoidal wave form was about 1.1. Then, when the voltage was to be transformed, it was easy to have a whole number for the turns ratio of the transformer and hence all subsequent AC voltages became multiples of 11.

********

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#5

Re: Transmission Voltages

12/16/2011 6:21 AM

Oft repeated question in the forum and yet to find a satisfactory answer.Check forum threads

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