capacitance or inductance?

Thread Starter

strantor

Joined Oct 3, 2010
6,875
1000v is passed through a 5000ft piece of wire on a spool. When the voltage is removed, a charge is left in the spool; if you touch it, it will shock you. Is this capacitance or inductance? I thought the spool was an inductor, but someone who I consider to be more knowledgeable than I, has told me that it is the effect of capacitance.
 

#12

Joined Nov 30, 2010
18,224
Inductive effects stop the instant all current stops. Inductance is inertia of current. The only answer left to you is capacitance.
 

Barnaby Walters

Joined Mar 2, 2011
102
Hi there,

Strantor — If you are referring to charge stored in the coil (I.E. once removed from a power source, the thing can still shock you after a few minutes) then that would have to be capacitance. Are you getting it confused with the backing EMF produced when a magnetic field generated by current flowing through a coil collapses and releases energy?

Thanks,
Barnaby
 

Thread Starter

strantor

Joined Oct 3, 2010
6,875
Hi there,

Strantor — If you are referring to charge stored in the coil (I.E. once removed from a power source, the thing can still shock you after a few minutes) then that would have to be capacitance. Are you getting it confused with the backing EMF produced when a magnetic field generated by current flowing through a coil collapses and releases energy?

Thanks,
Barnaby
Yes, that's what I had in mind. is it not the same thing? Is the shock felt, not back EMF?

Does the coil configuration have anything to do with the capacitance? If I were to stretch that 5000ft wire out in a straight line, would it still shock me?
 

shortbus

Joined Sep 30, 2009
10,049
In an older thread this was also discussed. The effect of the insulation makes it a capacitance when in a coil. This is why magnet wire is used for transformers.

Laid out straight it probably wouldn't Unless it was close to a broadcast tower/antenna.
 

kubeek

Joined Sep 20, 2005
5,796
If I were to stretch that 5000ft wire out in a straight line, would it still shock me?
Well, there is a chance you are talking about a coaxial cable. If you charged the coax to some voltage (between the inner and outer conductor, both ends unterminated) then the cable can hold quite large charge, depending on the voltage even enough to shock you.

Plain wire in a spool will "self-reset" in a very short time, leaving no voltage between the two ends.
 

steveb

Joined Jul 3, 2008
2,436
Does the coil configuration have anything to do with the capacitance? If I were to stretch that 5000ft wire out in a straight line, would it still shock me?
What kind of wire is it? Is it coaxial wire, or just insulated single strand wire, or maybe even uninsulated single strand wire?

Coaxial line is a very good capacitor actually, and it would be effective either coiled or straight.

A plane old single insulated wire would have capacitance much more variable with geometry of how it is spooled (or not).

An uninsulated wire would behave a lot like a metalic can once spooled because it would all be shorted out into one conductive sheet, and a conductive can is a crude single conductor capacitor not too different than the sphere on a Van de Graaff generator.
 

Thread Starter

strantor

Joined Oct 3, 2010
6,875
The spool in question that generated this specific question is actually a 7 insulated conductor cable, with pairs wire-nutted together to form a single conductor running back and forth through the length of the cable. the spool is about 5ft wide X 6ft diameter. The cable has 2 outer layers of heavy duty armor wire. the shock came between the conductor and the armor wire.

I have however had a similar experience with a 35,000ft spool of single conductor wire on a spool about 2ft wide X 2ft diameter. for that incident, the spool had been megger'd the night before and still had significant charge between the conductor and the reel to shock the p*ss out of me.
 

steveb

Joined Jul 3, 2008
2,436
The spool in question that generated this specific question is actually a 7 insulated conductor cable, with pairs wire-nutted together to form a single conductor running back and forth through the length of the cable. the spool is about 5ft wide X 6ft diameter. The cable has 2 outer layers of heavy duty armor wire. the shock came between the conductor and the armor wire.

I have however had a similar experience with a 35,000ft spool of single conductor wire on a spool about 2ft wide X 2ft diameter. for that incident, the spool had been megger'd the night before and still had significant charge between the conductor and the reel to shock the p*ss out of me.

So, I suspect the first example (the one that generated the question) is much more like the coax cable because you have an outer armor wire that acts similarly to the shield, and an inner conductor running back and forth inside. My guess is that this would be just as effective when unspooled.

The second example, may be much different when unspooled, but that's just a guess. Was the reel conductive?
 

kubeek

Joined Sep 20, 2005
5,796
The cable has 2 outer layers of heavy duty armor wire. the shock came between the conductor and the armor wire.
Exactly what constitues a kind of coax cable. You can try measuring its capacitance, it will be quite high. Next time discharge it before touching ;)

The other example probably creates a capacitance between the wire and the spool, which hold charge in a similar way.
 

Ron H

Joined Apr 14, 2005
7,063
If you charge up any large conductor (coax or not) to 1000V relative to earth, and then leave it floating, it will take a long time for that charge to bleed off. If you touch it, you will get shocked. It's similar to shuffling your feet on the carpet and then touching a grounded (or large ungrounded) conductor: You will get shocked.
You could charge your big mechanic's toolbox (with insulating wheels) to 1000V, and then get shocked when you touch it.
 

Thread Starter

strantor

Joined Oct 3, 2010
6,875
So,
1. The capacitance is between the inner conductor and a conductive body outside; and the capacitance is due more to this fact, than the fact that it is in a spool?
2. I can think of the wire's insulation as a dielectric?
3. Where does back EMF come into all of this? Is back EMF what you were referring to when you mentioned the charge that dissipates very quickly?
 

kubeek

Joined Sep 20, 2005
5,796
So,
1. The capacitance is between the inner conductor and a conductive body outside; and the capacitance is due more to this fact, than the fact that it is in a spool?
If the wire were laying flat on a metal surface, the result would be the same. Maybe a bit more since the outer layers of the spool add very little to the total capacitance, unlike the inner ones.

2. I can think of the wire's insulation as a dielectric?
Yes, inuslation=dielectric up to the rated voltage.

3. Where does back EMF come into all of this? Is back EMF what you were referring to when you mentioned the charge that dissipates very quickly?
back EMF comes from current flowing through the wire being suddenly interrupted, the effect you felt was because of different voltage between two insulated conductors.
 

#12

Joined Nov 30, 2010
18,224
Back emf has nothing to do with this. Back emf is about inductance. You have only capacitance working here, and yes, insulation = dielectric.
 

Thread Starter

strantor

Joined Oct 3, 2010
6,875
Ok, theoretical question,
If I were to charge up a co-ax cable to 1000V, then that charge exists between the inner and outer conductors, seperated by the insulation, correct? so, then if I were able to remove either the inner or outer conductor, without touching the two together, would the charge cease to exist? where would it go? If I seperated the two and placed one on each side of my house, surely there would not be a spark if I rejoined them sometime later, right?
 

ErnieM

Joined Apr 24, 2011
8,415
...The effect of the insulation makes it a capacitance when in a coil. This is why magnet wire is used for transformers.
As capacitance in inversely proportional to distance a thinner insulation leads to more capacitance. Magnet wire is used in transformers because the insulation is so very thin you can stuff more wire into the core.
 

kubeek

Joined Sep 20, 2005
5,796
Ok, theoretical question,
If I were to charge up a co-ax cable to 1000V, then that charge exists between the inner and outer conductors, seperated by the insulation, correct? so, then if I were able to remove either the inner or outer conductor, without touching the two together, would the charge cease to exist? where would it go?
When you have a capacitor charged with some charge, the relation is Q=C x V, charge stored is equal to capacitance times voltage. When you take the two conductors away this happens: the charge remains the same (a kind of energy conservation law) and the capacitance decrases rapidly, so the voltage has to incre ase to keep the relation.
So as you move the conductors apart, the voltage increases until you get a spark or the insulation breaks down and the charge discharges.
 
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