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Scott Dorsey wrote:
Chuck Harris wrote: But that is exactly backwards from the way chokes work. As the current rises, and the core approaches saturation, the coil starts to lose the inductance enhancement provided by the core, and it approaches the inductance of an equivalent air core choke. That is, the inductance *drops*, and the inductive reactance *drops* and the AC current shoots way up. That makes perfect sense to me. So how _do_ current-limiting chokes work, then? I always assumed they worked as I described but I may well be wrong. --scott On DC, they can't! No way, no how. On AC, a choke can limit the current by being a reactive component... kind of a lossless resistor for AC. But! Swinging chokes always reduce their inductance when the current rises. They typically have a 100:1 change in inductance over their design current range. -Chuck |
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