Noway2
Electrical
- Apr 15, 2005
- 789
I was having a conversation with my boss the other day and he alluded to a concept that I wasn't familiar with: using two CTs in a series combination where the secondary of one CT sources the primary of another.
Now, I can understand where one might do this in really high current applications to avoid using ridiculous turns ratios, but I was wondering if this is a common practice.
The other question I have, also related to CTs, is how common are center tapped CTs?
The application I was reviewing used the two CT approach I mentioned above, with the secondary CT center tapped. The center tap was then tied to analog ground. From looking at the circuit this would seem to have a few advantages over the traditional (?) approach of tying one end of all three CTs to ground. First off, it would also eliminate, or all but eliminate the common mode signal on the burden ressitor while still referencing the AC signal to analog common. This benefit is of practical use as it would allow you to put a difference amp across the burden resistor with the CT providing the DC path to ground for the input offset currents (a very low DC resistance too). I am also wondering if it would avoid or limit the "virtual (vector sum) neutral" that can cause ground currents or other disruptions when tied to analog common.
I am curious is anyone has run across these technique before as I am not drawing much information in my google searches.
Now, I can understand where one might do this in really high current applications to avoid using ridiculous turns ratios, but I was wondering if this is a common practice.
The other question I have, also related to CTs, is how common are center tapped CTs?
The application I was reviewing used the two CT approach I mentioned above, with the secondary CT center tapped. The center tap was then tied to analog ground. From looking at the circuit this would seem to have a few advantages over the traditional (?) approach of tying one end of all three CTs to ground. First off, it would also eliminate, or all but eliminate the common mode signal on the burden ressitor while still referencing the AC signal to analog common. This benefit is of practical use as it would allow you to put a difference amp across the burden resistor with the CT providing the DC path to ground for the input offset currents (a very low DC resistance too). I am also wondering if it would avoid or limit the "virtual (vector sum) neutral" that can cause ground currents or other disruptions when tied to analog common.
I am curious is anyone has run across these technique before as I am not drawing much information in my google searches.