On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 14:51:55 -0000, "Jim Hawkins" <
jimha...@manx.net> wrote:
>Jim Hawkins wrote:
>> Is a mains transformer designed for 60Hz significantly lighter than
>> one of the same VA rating designed for 50Hz ?
>>
>> Jim Hawkins
>
>Following on from this, why is it that electricity generation is limited to
>such low frequencies as 50 or 60 Hz ?
Losses. Mechanics.
>As the frequency rises, the energy lost through electromagnetic radiation
>from the wires rises, but is it really a significant amount ?
Yes.
>Would it be significant at 1 kHz ?
Yes, certainly.
>If not, why isn't generation done at that sort of frequency ?
>The savings in transformer weights and sizes everywhere would
>be enormous. Is it because of mechanical engineering limitations on the
>rotational speeds of the large rotary generators the power stations use ?
Partly. 1kHz translates to a 60,000 RPM generator. That's kinda high for a
generator of a useful size (60Hz = 3600RPM, much better). Multipole
generators are possible, but that only reduces this linearly and increases the
size similarly.