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Q: Is it resistive coil or inductive coil in electric geysers?
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Are solenoid valves resistive loads or inductive loads?

Resistive Load An electrical load which is characteristic of not having any significant inrush current. When a resistive load is energised, the current rises instantly to it's steady-state value, without first rising to a higher value. An electrical load in which voltage and current are converted to energy in the form of heat; i.e., an electrical heater, incandescent bulb. Inductive Load An electrical load which pulls a large amount of current (an inrush current) when first energized. After a few cycles or seconds the current "settles down" to the full-load running current. The time required for the curren to "settle down" depends on the frequency or/and the inductance value of the Inductive load


What is the difference between an inductive and a capacitive load?

Resistance load it means there is passive load to impede current flow. Inductive load means there is a coil as a load while still a passive it has its own characteristics which differs from a resistive load which is linear while inductive is not linear load


Is it possible to have pure inductive coil?

no


Why is there a difference in current in a coil when you apply dc voltage and then AC voltage to it?

A coil has both resistance and inductance. When you apply a d.c. voltage, the opposition to current is the resistance of the coil. When you apply an a.c. voltage, the opposition to current is impedance -the vector-sum of the coil's resistance and its inductive reactance. Inductive reactance is proportional to the inductance of the coil and the frequency of the supply.


What is the inductive reactance of a 5 Henry coil connected to a 60 hz source?

inductive reactance= XL= 2*pi*.1*60=12pi ohm

Related questions

Are solenoid valves resistive loads or inductive loads?

Resistive Load An electrical load which is characteristic of not having any significant inrush current. When a resistive load is energised, the current rises instantly to it's steady-state value, without first rising to a higher value. An electrical load in which voltage and current are converted to energy in the form of heat; i.e., an electrical heater, incandescent bulb. Inductive Load An electrical load which pulls a large amount of current (an inrush current) when first energized. After a few cycles or seconds the current "settles down" to the full-load running current. The time required for the curren to "settle down" depends on the frequency or/and the inductance value of the Inductive load


What is the difference between an inductive and a capacitive load?

Resistance load it means there is passive load to impede current flow. Inductive load means there is a coil as a load while still a passive it has its own characteristics which differs from a resistive load which is linear while inductive is not linear load


Examples of inductive load?

electric motorrelay coilspeaker coilspeedup coil (in vacuum tube or discrete transistor digital logic)etc.


Is it possible to have pure inductive coil?

no


Why is there a difference in current in a coil when you apply dc voltage and then AC voltage to it?

A coil has both resistance and inductance. When you apply a d.c. voltage, the opposition to current is the resistance of the coil. When you apply an a.c. voltage, the opposition to current is impedance -the vector-sum of the coil's resistance and its inductive reactance. Inductive reactance is proportional to the inductance of the coil and the frequency of the supply.


What is ideal choke coil?

An ideal choke coil has only inductance. It has zero resistance and no stray capacitance, therefore no resonances.


Do you use the ac volts position when checking the continuity of a resistive coil?

No, you use the ohms position.


What factors affect the inductive reactance of a coil in a A C circuit?

Current Flow I believe.


What is the inductive reactance of a 5 Henry coil connected to a 60 hz source?

inductive reactance= XL= 2*pi*.1*60=12pi ohm


What is purpose of diode in solenoid?

If the coil is powered with DC voltage, an inductive voltage is created anytime power to the coil is de-energized. The inductive voltage is called an inductive kick and it is up to ten times the applied voltage and is in reverse polarity to the applied voltage. A diode or other type of suppression device must be connected across the coil of the solenoid to protect any other electronic components in the circuit that may be damaged by this voltage. The diode is connected in reverse bias across the DC solenoid coil so that when voltage is applied in normal polarity, the diode does not provide a path for current. When the solenoid coil is de-energized, the inductive voltage is the opposite polarity to the power supply, so it will flow through the diode and back into the coil. Since the coil is made of a large length of wire. the energy of the inductive voltage will be dissipated as it moves through the wire. This will render the excessive inductive voltage harmless. The fact that the inductive voltage will travel through the diode in the forward bias direction means the 0.7-1 volt drop across the diode junction will also limit the V=< (dv/dt) surge. Fig. 4 (below) illustrates an example of the diode connected across the coil of a solenoid that is powered with DC voltage.


How does a coil affect a motor?

..because of coil it creates magnetic field through the magnet, the coil contains electric charges and it continue to move, upward and downward. The significant of coil is to store electric charges.


How do you beat the impossible app on your i pod touch where you have to get the electric coil off?

Drag the word "electric coil" off and hit continue