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#1
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Cecil Moore wrote:
wrote: Nope. The CM choke works precisely because the common mode currents are mirror images, 180 degrees out of phase. You are 100% wrong. From "The IEEE Dictionary": "common-mode (1)(general) The instantaneous algebraic average of two signals applied to a balanced circuit, both signals referred to a common reference." The "instantaneous algebraic average of two signals" 180 degrees out of phase is ZERO. Cecil: You must be getting old ... stop man! :-) Regards, JS -- It is like a nightmare where the public servants are the people which the police are supposed to protect us from! |
#2
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On Sep 3, 10:56*pm, John Smith wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: wrote: Nope. The CM choke works precisely because the common mode currents are mirror images, 180 degrees out of phase. You are 100% wrong. From "The IEEE Dictionary": "common-mode (1)(general) The instantaneous algebraic average of two signals applied to a balanced circuit, both signals referred to a common reference." The "instantaneous algebraic average of two signals" 180 degrees out of phase is ZERO. Cecil: You must be getting old ... stop man! *:-) Regards, JS -- It is like a nightmare where the public servants are the people which the police are supposed to protect us from! Yes, ZERO with respect to the isolated reference point. They are measured with respect to each other, not ground. No current should flow through the ground line if the feed is perfectly balanced. |
#3
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