Part I treats of the calculation and application of the armature self-inductive reactance of synchronous machines. A short, reliable method is given in the form of curves, Figs. 20A, B, C, making the calculation from design sheet data a matter of a few minutes. Table I shows a comparison of calculated and test values (obtained from saturation and synchronous impedance curves) for 138 machines, ranging from high-speed turbine generators to the low-speed engine type. Three points were brought out during the investigation: (1) That in polyphase machines, the armature self-inductive reactance, just as the armature reaction, is a polyphase, not a single-phase phenomenon, and therefore the mutual induction of phases in a three-phase machine increases the effective self-induction of each phase by approximately 50 per cent over the single phase value, while in two-phase machines, in which the mutual induction of phases is zero, the effective self-induction of the phase is the same for two-phase or single-phase operation. (2) That the variation of armature reactance during the cycle, due to salient-pole construction, is practically eliminated in Y-connected, three-phase machines for the reason that the variation, consisting almost entirely of a third harmonic, is cancelled in such machines. This leaves, in effect, a uniform reluctance for the leakage flux emanating from the tooth tips. (3) That in the familiar method of obtaining the armature self-induction from the saturation and synchronous impedance curves (i.e.
[1]
A. B. Field.
Operating characteristics of large turbo-generators
,
1912,
Proceedings of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers.
[2]
R. F. Schuchardt,et al.
The Use of Power-Limiting Reactances with Large Turbo-Alternators
,
1911,
Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers.
[3]
Carl J. Fechheimer.
Self starting synchronous motors
,
1912,
Proceedings of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers.
[4]
E. M. Hewlett,et al.
Rating and Selection of Oil Circuit Breakers
,
1918,
Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers.
[5]
N. S. Diamant.
Calculation of Sudden Short-Circuit Phenomena of Alternators
,
1915,
Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers.
[6]
H. Weichsel.
Decomposing Magnetic Fields into their Higher Harmonics
,
1915,
Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers.
[7]
William A. Durgin,et al.
The transient reactions of alternators
,
1912,
Proceedings of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers.
[8]
S. P. Smith,et al.
The shape of the pressure wave in electrical machinery
,
1915
.