el_manu
Member
I am in a dillemma here on whether AC is actually better than DC
In the syllabus, it is learnt that having AC generators and transmitting over AC is beneficial to provide electricity to homes. DC generators and transmission is seen as inferior due to the maintenance (wearing down of brushes etc...), having no transformers, and also a lot of loss traveling at low voltages...meaning a power station can only be local as low voltage transmission is in the cities for safety reasons...
However, in my reading I have come across brushless DC motors and generators that use electrical signals to turn the current around (instead of the commutator). An example is the fan in a computer is brushless DC motor. Brushless DC generators are however expensive, but they make up for it in the long run where little maintenance is needed...however I am not sure whether they cost less than AC generators, I would think not..
Also, the syllabus fails to mention how at High Voltages, DC is a MUCH more efficient way of transporting electricity as it doesn't lose energy through EM Radiation as AC electricity does. In Europe currently, High Voltage DC transmission are used to connect different countries AC power systems, as the High Voltage DC transmission for those long distances reduces power loss.
The syllabus also fails to mention how there are DC 'transformers' which have been around since the 1950's and has improved considerably since then. They are called ''DC-DC converters''...and are the DC equivalent to AC transformers. So now using these DC 'transformers', the voltage of DC electricity can now be stepped up and down accordingly through the power lines and into homes for our devices.
As I have mentioned, DC electricity is less efficient at low voltages, however, the majority of the electricity transmission is from the Power Station to the cities, where High Voltages are used in transmission anyway. Hence, the little energy loss we get from using low DC voltages amongst cities is minimal in the greater scheme of things. Also, most appliances run on DC electricity anyway, so there is no point adding an extra cost of converting to DC electricity, as we do now.
The final point, DC electricity MAY turn out to be better for health as it doesn't give off low-frequency EM fields which possibly cause cancers.
So that's my current dillemma....I suspect that brushless DC generators might cost more than AC generators so maybe sticking to an AC generator, and then converting STRAIGHT AWAY, and then sending DC throughout transmission lines may be the solution (using the DC 'transformer' at substations and on power lines, etc...)
To be honest, Now after research, I don't know if its better to have AC or DC or Both....
I would be grateful if someone could help me out a bit!!!
In the syllabus, it is learnt that having AC generators and transmitting over AC is beneficial to provide electricity to homes. DC generators and transmission is seen as inferior due to the maintenance (wearing down of brushes etc...), having no transformers, and also a lot of loss traveling at low voltages...meaning a power station can only be local as low voltage transmission is in the cities for safety reasons...
However, in my reading I have come across brushless DC motors and generators that use electrical signals to turn the current around (instead of the commutator). An example is the fan in a computer is brushless DC motor. Brushless DC generators are however expensive, but they make up for it in the long run where little maintenance is needed...however I am not sure whether they cost less than AC generators, I would think not..
Also, the syllabus fails to mention how at High Voltages, DC is a MUCH more efficient way of transporting electricity as it doesn't lose energy through EM Radiation as AC electricity does. In Europe currently, High Voltage DC transmission are used to connect different countries AC power systems, as the High Voltage DC transmission for those long distances reduces power loss.
The syllabus also fails to mention how there are DC 'transformers' which have been around since the 1950's and has improved considerably since then. They are called ''DC-DC converters''...and are the DC equivalent to AC transformers. So now using these DC 'transformers', the voltage of DC electricity can now be stepped up and down accordingly through the power lines and into homes for our devices.
As I have mentioned, DC electricity is less efficient at low voltages, however, the majority of the electricity transmission is from the Power Station to the cities, where High Voltages are used in transmission anyway. Hence, the little energy loss we get from using low DC voltages amongst cities is minimal in the greater scheme of things. Also, most appliances run on DC electricity anyway, so there is no point adding an extra cost of converting to DC electricity, as we do now.
The final point, DC electricity MAY turn out to be better for health as it doesn't give off low-frequency EM fields which possibly cause cancers.
So that's my current dillemma....I suspect that brushless DC generators might cost more than AC generators so maybe sticking to an AC generator, and then converting STRAIGHT AWAY, and then sending DC throughout transmission lines may be the solution (using the DC 'transformer' at substations and on power lines, etc...)
To be honest, Now after research, I don't know if its better to have AC or DC or Both....
I would be grateful if someone could help me out a bit!!!
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