BobaMosfet
- Joined Jul 1, 2009
- 2,211
Dear all,
I have started studying electronics a few weeks ago and I am confused about the concepts of the Hot, neutral and ground wires.
I will explain what I understand and what I don't understand and I will ask for your help in clarifying what I don't understand please.
Let's say we are generating AC in the following way:
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So far so good, as we can see, that wire loop has two ends.
Now consider the following badly drawn circuit:
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Let's say the AC generator generates an amplitude of 50V, so it oscillates between -50V and 50V.
Here are my difficulties.
1) If we connect one of the ends of the AC generator to Earth Ground, that is, an actual Rod inside the earth, let's say 5 metres, then what is the voltage on that rod really? Is it 0 relative to the AC generator?
I have marked the diagram with the labels S1 and S2 in order to talk about the direction of the current in each AC half cycle.
2) What is the voltage in the "Neutral" wire? Is it 0? But if it is 0, then what about the voltage coming from the AC generator itself?
I don't even know what it is that I don't understand here. This concept of neutral wire doesn't make sense to me.
I guess the biggest question for me is, once you add a ground to an AC circuit, how do you define the voltages? With respect to what? If the current is flowing in one direction, what point do you use to mark a positive voltage and what point to mark a negative voltage, what about 0 voltage?
Oh dear, if someone could please help me with this, I would be grateful until the day I die!
Best wishes
Paulo
Here is an image that hopefully will Help. The 'ground' symble beside the mouse-pointer is there because the simulator requires it. Ignore that. This circuit represents what a pole transformer delivers to a house on a single phase in the USA.![]()
Please have a look at my drawing, does it make some sense? It's for the first half of a full AC cycle.
240VAC on primary side, 120VAC on each (upper & lower half) of the secondary side. Notice the waveforms. Orange & Green overlap exactly, that's why you don't see green. But you can see their amplitude in relationship to the original 240VAC amplitude.
The ground-symbol on the secondary side is actually neutral. In a load-center in the USA, ground and neutral are tied together at the load center, not before. So in a home or business, most office equipment can't tell the difference. Breakers (for safety) can-- and usually watch for voltage showing up on the neutral or ground, which indicates a short to ground.
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