Adding up current

In a ring final circuit
(Based on Paul Cooks commentary of the 17th edition)

Very simple curent split using both legs of the ring

Not sure about adding up the currents in each leg
Take leg 2 Than will have the Ia of sockets 4,3 and 2
and the Ib of socket 1
How do these add up so you know the current in this leg?
Hope that makes sense
Thanks


Parents
  • Sorry to keep asking...

    Could I just try to confirm how current is added in a ring final leg.
    my online research keeps giving me different answers

    I kind of understand the idea that with maths you can have  clockwise or anticlock wise or + and - 
    and have algebraic answers or superposition...
    But  actual current in a piece of copper you can only have 1 value and 1 direction

    In the attached picture. I have the total theoretical current traffic through a conductor
    The clockwise and anti clockwise currents
    And clock wise subtracted from anti clockwise.

    If I put a clamp around one live conductor at leg two
    is is possible from the numbers calculated to have a real world current value?

    frustratingly I read that you just add the values, and the the different opinion 
    that they cancel (Which seemed to be the guidance on here)

    appreciate your help...

    Thanks very much

Reply
  • Sorry to keep asking...

    Could I just try to confirm how current is added in a ring final leg.
    my online research keeps giving me different answers

    I kind of understand the idea that with maths you can have  clockwise or anticlock wise or + and - 
    and have algebraic answers or superposition...
    But  actual current in a piece of copper you can only have 1 value and 1 direction

    In the attached picture. I have the total theoretical current traffic through a conductor
    The clockwise and anti clockwise currents
    And clock wise subtracted from anti clockwise.

    If I put a clamp around one live conductor at leg two
    is is possible from the numbers calculated to have a real world current value?

    frustratingly I read that you just add the values, and the the different opinion 
    that they cancel (Which seemed to be the guidance on here)

    appreciate your help...

    Thanks very much

Children
  • It might be easier to understand in d.c. If you have three 1.5 V batteries and put them all in series, you have (+1.5 V) +(+1.5 V) + (+1.5 V) = +4.5 V. However if the middle one is the wrong way round, you get (+1.5 V) +(-1.5 V) + (+1.5 V) = +1.5 V.

    The currents need to be treated as vectors, i.e. they have direction as well as magnitude. The magnitude of cw and acw cannot simply be added because they are going in different directions.

    So, let cw be positive and acw negative. You have (+7.39 A) + (-2.83 A) = (7.39 - 2.83) A = 4.56 A. So your clamp meter would show 4.56 A, as indeed would an ordinary meter if you inserted it in the ring.

    By contrast, in leg 5, you have (+0.34 A) + (-15.77 A) =(0.34 - 15.77) A = -15.43 A. The minus sign indicates that the net current is going the opposite way, i.e. anticlockwise.

    Your clamp meter does not show the direction of flow, but CT clamps (as used in solar PV and EVCPs), which need to know whether current is coming or going, will do so: positive one way, and negative the other.

    HTH.