The drawings without the third wire were to illustrate the direction and phase of the currents without that third wire, so that you can see how they don't change when that third wire is added.Because you seem hell bent on ignoring the 3rd wire. You do drawings without it, and now you say that 2-phase 3-wire must be nonsense because they called it 1-phase before.
Yes.Did they call it 1-phase 3-wire before?
Ridiculously large text which can't even be read in full on a modest sized screen is stupid and does nothing to make your point more than a few point sizes larger, bold, underlined, or different colour would do.It wasn't silly, and it was necessary, because another thing you were (and really were, not just seemed to be) hell bent on ignoring was my repeated over and over and over and over again point that you MUST look at it from a particular point of view and that you MUST use the centre point as the point of reference to observe and describe everything from.
But you're ignoring what I've pointed out - That adding that third wire in no way changes the instantaneous direction of any of the currents, nor their phase relationship to each other.And I say that because I started out with the attitude that we have this definition, and I wanted to look at it to see if there's a way which makes it valid, whereas you have started out with the prejudice that it is nonsense and that you will reject anything that shows it not to be nonsense, even if in doing so you engage in willfully ignoring what people say to you over and over again
You don't seem to be arguing that this is anything but single phase -
- but you want to say that this -
- is, even though I1 & I2 are still flowing in the same direction at any moment, and even though the phase relationship between I1 & I2 hasn't changed in any way. And -
Even when R1=R2 so that there's no current flowing in it?It is the introduction of that 3rd point, the centre point, which brings about the change from single-phase 2-wire to 2-phase 3-wire, therefore that 3rd wire must be of fundamental importance.
With a balanced load (R1=R2) you will get exactly the same voltage across and current through each resistance with or without that third wire being connected. With a balanced load, connecting that third wire changes nothing in the circuit - No voltages change, no currents change in direction, magnitude or relationship to each other.
I was using north-south as being a relevant concept as we were relating it to things like a car driving along a road, or that train going from London to Liverpool, because relative to the complete distance travelled in those cases north and south remain fixed references.And there we have it - one of the most outrageous examples of wriggling and goal post moving it has ever been my displeasure to see here.
Shall I count up the number of times YOU used the concept of consistent north to south travel as a way to say that my argument about it being relative to the observer was nonsense?
Obviously if we start talking about crossing the north or south pole that's a rather different kettle of fish because of the nature of the earth and the reference points that we call north and south.
Based upon what assumptions?Please tell me who is right, and who is wrong, and why.
But that's what we're discussing. Any anology with something else has to be related to an electrical circuit to make sense.I never asked, and don't want, you to relate it to an electrical circuit.
From my perspective on earth the moon can appear to be almost the same size as the sun. But we all know that it isn't. Just because something appears to be one thing does not necessarily mean that it is - As in the case of your Mobius strip, if the observer is not aware of all the facts he can see things differently from somebody who is looking from outside and can see the whole picture.You're being asked for your observation of what went on from your perspective. Just as you didn't know, when asked, that you were on a Mobius strip you do not have any way to find out, and never will find out, that you were, so there's no "initially assume", there is just your answer.
From your perspective it had changed direction. A different perspective, a different frame of reference, might yield a different answer, but that doesn't make the answer from your perspective wrong, it's the right answer from your perspective.
But you can do exactly the same thing with the 2-wire circuit which you seem to accept as being single phase. Pick any point on the circuit as your reference and measure the voltages appearing either side of that point and they'll appear to be out of phase - Because your reference point is between them. But when I tried to explain that you dimissed it as irrelevant because the drawing wasn't showing a 3 wire system.That's exactly what I'm doing.No. You can only compare the phase of the two voltages by referencing them to some common point.
You have two voltages which are out of phase relative to that point. You don't seem to understand that you can get that with a simple 2 wire circuit. The point is whether you have more than one phase of current flowing in the circuit. And you don't.So I do what you say I can only do, which is to compare the phase of the two voltages by referencing them to some common point, and when I do that and see two different phases (i.e. a non-zero angle between them) I don't have two phases?
You can have a single phase supply derived from a 3 phase source. So what?The overall picture remains resolutely 3-phase 4-wire. But it's perfectly OK when your frame of reference changes to just two of those wires for you to say it's single phase?
Actual direction of movement wouldn't change (no more than it was already doing by following the curvature of the earth anyway). Yes, you'd change from heading to north to heading south, but only because you've just crossed the reference point that we call north.So, what about circumpolar travel?
Would your direction change as you crossed the North Pole and went from travelling north to travelling south?
But you don't want to see that the argument you're applying to the centre point of the xfmr applies equally to any point on conductor, even one within a 2 wire system which can't be anything but single phase.The fact that a different observer with a different frame of reference will observe something different does not make either one wrong. But I am truly beginning to think that you really do not get that.
Yes, I understand perfectly that things can appear different depending upon one's perspective, but if you can't see the points I've been trying to make by now, I really don't see much point in going into even more car/train analogies.