So if i had 25 amps running through the neutral then i got it down to 3, then was i actually wasting 22 amps? (or if this is way too complicated for me then dont worry about it)
main question is , where is the "waste"?
Thanks as always 5toned!
wb
it has to do with the way a/c works. even after the electricity has passed through your device and done its 'job' additional volt-amps are used up by the current running down the neutral and dissapating into earth.
when you have a balanced load, the volt/amps travel across phases and help power other devices on the opposite phase.
ill give a simple but somewhat complicated explanation...
at peak voltage on a 120/240 service, you have 177 volts positive on phase one, and 177 volts negative polarity on phase 2...
now lets pretend there are to devices on that service, one on phase 1, one on phase 2. both devices pull 10 amps, balanced load... when the device one phase 1 uses 10 amps of
positive current, the device on phase 2 uses 10 amps of
negative current. ( b4 i go further, think of a train, constantly going one distance in one direction, then reversing and traveling the same distance backwards, repeating the cycle endlessly, that is alternating current... the cars of the train would be individual electrons) now because you have 2 phases at opposite polarity, the energy that would normally be used to carry the load down the neutral, to the panel, outside your house to the power companies pole, will instead do something rather remarkable, at the panel, where the load would normally go outside, instead travels
back up the neutral and is used tpo power devices on the opposite phase.... if you had one device on phase 1 that pulled 12 amps, and a device on phase 2 that pulled 10 amps, then you would have 2 amps of unbalanced current running down the neutral.... make sense?