mriechert
Electrical
- Sep 11, 2001
- 10
Hello
Why is a capacitive power factor undesirable?
I am currently working on a project and have managed to build a controller that corrects the power factor by generating a greater or lesser inductance on the system.
The system load is inductive but a fixed capacitor is used to make the load capacive and hence a variable inductor can be used to correct the power factor and it bring it to unity.
However I have been adviced to not bring it to unity but rather make it a little inductive. Becuase I should not risk a capacitive power factor.
Why is this the case?
Surely the same amount of current would be drawn from a load with the same power factor no matter if it is inductive or capacitive.. the only thing I can assume is that it has something to do with the fact that the current is leading the voltage when the PF is capacitive..
Can anyone enlighten me please...
Michael
Why is a capacitive power factor undesirable?
I am currently working on a project and have managed to build a controller that corrects the power factor by generating a greater or lesser inductance on the system.
The system load is inductive but a fixed capacitor is used to make the load capacive and hence a variable inductor can be used to correct the power factor and it bring it to unity.
However I have been adviced to not bring it to unity but rather make it a little inductive. Becuase I should not risk a capacitive power factor.
Why is this the case?
Surely the same amount of current would be drawn from a load with the same power factor no matter if it is inductive or capacitive.. the only thing I can assume is that it has something to do with the fact that the current is leading the voltage when the PF is capacitive..
Can anyone enlighten me please...
Michael