It's applicable anytime you have a combination of any three: charge, voltage, current, power, or impedance.
Power lines are high voltage to reduce energy loss during transmission. Transmitting electricity at high voltages allows for more efficient long-distance transmission, reduces the amount of current needed, and minimizes heat loss, resulting in cost savings and increased reliability of the power grid.
Power stations use step-up transformers to transmit power at a high voltage instead of a high current. This reduces the power lost in the transmission lines.
High voltage transmission lines use electricity to efficiently transport power over long distances by increasing the voltage of the electricity. This allows for the power to travel long distances with minimal loss of energy. The high voltage reduces the amount of current needed, which in turn reduces the energy lost as heat during transmission.
Higher voltage and effectively unlimited current.house wiring is 120V to 240Vneighborhood distribution power lines are 1000V to 5000Vcity and industrial distribution power lines are 20,000V to 50,000Vintercity high tension transmission power lines are 100,000V to 1,000,000V
Power lines have a high voltage to reduce the amount of current flowing through them, which helps to minimize heat loss and energy waste during the transmission of electricity.
Electricity is distributed through a network of power lines, transformers, and substations. Power plants generate electricity and transmit it through high-voltage transmission lines to substations, where the voltage is lowered for distribution to homes, businesses, and other buildings through power lines.
An anchor pylon is an end point which utilizes horizontal insulators and occur at the end points of high-power transmission lines.
In high power AM transmission, modulation is done at
Power lines run at high voltages to overcome line loss.
The power station delivers electricity to houses through a network of power lines and transformers. The electricity is transmitted at high voltages over long distances through transmission lines, which are then stepped down to lower voltages by transformers before being distributed to individual homes through power lines.
Transmission lines use alternating current in order to support stepping-up and stepping-down of the voltage with transformers. Voltage is stepped-up at the power station, sent over the transmission lines, and stepped-down at the receiver. (This is a simplified explanation.) By stepping-up, you reduce the current carrying requirement of the lines, and they can thus be smaller.You could not do this with direct current as transformers only work for alternating current.
The transmission cooler lines are located coming from the radiator on the bottom. One is for the sending and the other for return. The lines are high pressure, just as your radiator hoses are when the car is running. The lines go from the radiator to the top of the transmission.