No
A load, at low frequencies, can be either capacitive, resistive, or inductive. At high frequencies, all three aspects exist. At low frequencies (say <= 10 MHz), a capacitive load is a capacitor, represented by an ideal cap, the MOScap, or a junction cap. An unintentional capacitive load would be the wire or conductor to another wire or conductor or ground. At high frequencies (say >= 1 GHz), all things have a capacitive nature. The higher the frequency, the worst is the capacitive leak A capacitive load means just that the load acts like a capacitor load as opposed to a inductor or resistive load
A battery is usually thought of as a source, not a load. If you are charging a battery, then it will be resistive, especially if you are attempting to charge it like you should, with a DC power supply (not AC).
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
A purely resistive load is one in which there is no capacitive or inductive reactance. Whe driven by an AC voltage source, such a load will have no shift in phase angle between voltage and current.
capacitive reaction
No
A load, at low frequencies, can be either capacitive, resistive, or inductive. At high frequencies, all three aspects exist. At low frequencies (say <= 10 MHz), a capacitive load is a capacitor, represented by an ideal cap, the MOScap, or a junction cap. An unintentional capacitive load would be the wire or conductor to another wire or conductor or ground. At high frequencies (say >= 1 GHz), all things have a capacitive nature. The higher the frequency, the worst is the capacitive leak A capacitive load means just that the load acts like a capacitor load as opposed to a inductor or resistive load
capacitor bank
ceiling fan approx 80w and tube light 40w
A transformer is fundamentally a set of coils; therefore, a transformer is an inductive load. However, by "transformer load", you seem to mean "the load that is connected to a transformer". Whether that load is inductive or capacitive depends mostly on what is hooked up to the transformer.
A battery is usually thought of as a source, not a load. If you are charging a battery, then it will be resistive, especially if you are attempting to charge it like you should, with a DC power supply (not AC).
A load of any type,,,inductive or capacitive , would effect the circuit even if THOSE "loads" had no load on them. They would still have a load effect on the circuit they are connected to.Answer'Under no-load conditions' means that no load is connected to the supply. So your question doesn't make sense!
No power is dissipated by a load composed exclusively of either capacitive or inductive reactance.
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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
A purely resistive load is one in which there is no capacitive or inductive reactance. Whe driven by an AC voltage source, such a load will have no shift in phase angle between voltage and current.