Power transformers are one of the key components in the electric distribution grid.
Electricity is generated at power stations (hydroelectric, coal, solar). That's easy.
The tough part is (and that's not commonly understood) - its extremely hard to store electricity in large quantities. In fact, it's downright impossible.
Unlike water, fuel or food - storing electricity in large quantities (enough to supply a town for a week, for example) is simply not economical. Yes, batteries and capacitors do just that, but nothing close to the relative quantities. The best electric car can do on a charge barely half a tank of gas. And it uses a very, very heavy set of batteries to store that charge.
So the tough reality is that electricity needs to be continually generated, day and night, and continually be supplied to its consumers. If the consumers do not use the generated electricity, the energy used to create it has gone to waste - again, because there's no known way to store electricity for the time when the consumer needs it.
Think of one of those portable generators. You fill it with fuel, start it and it promptly starts converting fuel to electricity, whether you plug an appliance to it or not. See my point?
Now, since electricity can't be stored efficiently, it needs to be continually transported to (often) great distances. That's the power lines hanging on poles everywhere.
That's where power transformers come in. For physical reasons, the most efficient way to transport electricity is for it to be at the highest possible voltage. The higher the voltage, the less electricity is wasted in the distribution grid.
Voltage, for the purpose of this blog, is just like water pressure. So lets just say that the higher the pressure, the less waste in the electric 'pipe'.
Power transformers convert one voltage for another. So there are (huge) power transformers to convert the generator voltage to high voltage, ready to be transported. High voltage means hundreds of thousands of volts (400,000 volts is common). Now, on the other end, power transformers convert that voltage down back to the consumer voltage - commonly 110v, 220v.
So there, power transformers are the 'pressure converters' from low voltage to high voltage and back to low. And they are critical in any power grid.
Transformers are everywhere, all around us. Wall adapters, chargers, inside every power supply. They all convert voltages (110v, 220v) to whatever voltage is needed by the electronic circuitry (5v, 9volts etc).
Power transformers differ from a wall wart mainly in that they deal with huge quantities of electricity compared to their dwarf sibling. So they need to be a lot more efficient and they are much, much more expensive.
For example, they need to be liquid cooled, and they use a special transformer oil for that.
And they are a dangerous device to deal with, because of the high voltages involved. Thus they are confined to cages and locked rooms and are serviced and maintained by professionals only.
Megawatt Transformers offers service and maintenance to power transformers. We have a power transformers analysis lab, we offer transformer oil analysis treatment and hold a large inventory of spare parts.
We also offer power transformer recycling, and sell the recycled cores. We are the first EPA approved power transformer recycling plant in Israel.
Friday, August 28, 2009
What are power transformers
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Thursday, August 20, 2009
A thing or two about me
Firstly - I'm a confessed hacker. The white hat kind.
Well, almost. A quarter of a century ago I did try to write a virus. It never left the lab, so don't start pointing fingers. I made a bet I could assemble one that would be so tiny it could hide in the memory of a modem card. Technically, I lost.
I'm deeply interested in anything technology। I really am.
One of the things I've been doing for a long while is home automation - I have this 12 years old site about X10 home automation. That's centuries in Internet years. But it still gets a quarter of a million hits per year. That led to my contributions to 'Smart Home Hacks' (amazon)
At its peak, my house would look up the weather on the Internet, and base a weekly irrigation plan on it, and decide when to turn on the hot water heater or let the solar panel do its thing. All thanks to a very high WAF (wife acceptance factor).
Lights would follow you turning on and off as you walk around the house. At the time I thought that a house was an awesomely cool gadget and I hacked and hacked at it.
She drew the line when the house started greeting people with synthesized voice. That was one too many.
And when GPS devices came out, I tinkered with a Garmin etrex, and have a technical site on everything you ever needed to know about the etrex GPS device. It too is fairly aged. That led to contributions to 'Hacking GPS' (amazon).
Then there's mountain biking. Yup, I have a site about mountain biking too, though not nearly as developed. I'm an eccentric mountain biker, I think. I'd like to keep the bike simple, but the biking to extreme as much as I dare. I recently got back from a two week mountain biking trip to Armenia (youtube), where no mountain bikes have gone before, as far as we could tell. It was a blast, to say the least. All on a single-pivot, 2003 Santa Cruz superlight.
I could go on with more of the above, but I think that's plenty to sample.
Professionally, I naturally was attracted to computers, and I've begun at a time when the only way to communicate with one was via a deck of punched cards. I always wanted to get as close as possible to this most complex machine ever made - which has led me to a long career as a circuit design engineer at intel. Fourteen years worth of projects - from the first Pentium with multimedia extensions (1995), via the first laptop with wifi (centrino, 2003) and its successors.
But after so many years, things started to dry up at intel, as far as I was concerned. I was ripe for change.
Around 2006 I met this new kid on the intel block, Nissim Estrougo. He had a personality that was in so many respects diametrically opposed to most anyone I've met around intel's high-tech scene (me included). He was loud, walked around with beach sandals, and kept telling everyone what lousy jobs we all have. He never appeared to do any work, and made a point out of it. My first reaction was 'man - what a screw-up HR had'. Then, one day, over lunch, Nissim explained to me in great detail the philosophical intricacies of 'The Matrix'- my favorite movie of all times. Things changed very rapidly from that day on.
Little did I know he and I would create Megawatt Transformers out of thin air, and two years later scribe on the fresh concrete at the entrance - 'There Is No Spoon'.
Next post - maybe about how we fought for the creation of Megawatt. Maybe I'll get Nissim to write - though he moans every time he has to type anything longer than a full sentence.
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Ido Bar-Tana,
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Saturday, August 15, 2009
Megawatt Transformers - Introduction
Welcome to Megawatt Transformer's blog!
Megawatt Transformer is the creation of Nissim Estrougo and me, Ido Bar-Tana.
This blog will describe my personal view of Megawatt Transformers. Stuff you won't find on our official web site. Like 'the making of..', a bit of 'behind the scene...' and 'sneak peaks and previews...' - all wrapped with my infamous cynical humor (may contain nuts!)
So I think a good place to start is with the official definition of Megawatt Transformers:
mega·watt (meg′ə wät′)
n. Abbr. MW
One million watts.
Examples: One megawatt is equivalent to the energy produced by about 10 automobile engines.
trans·form·er (trăns-fôr'mər)
n.
- One that transforms (e.g. Optimus Prime)
- A device used to transfer electric energy from one circuit to another, especially a pair of multiply wound, inductively coupled wire coils that effect such a transfer with a change in voltage, current, phase, or other electric characteristic. (e.g. this baby)
- A company offering advanced analysis, maintenance, repair and servicing to electric power transformers of all sizes.
- The first and only EPA approved power transformer recycling plant in Israel. Offering silicon steel laminations and copper windings.
Ido Bar-Tana Telephone:+972-545-382045 Email: ido.bartana@megawatt.co.il Skype: ido_bartana
Tele-fax:+97249531259 Postal address: Shachak Industial Park, 37862 Email: http://www.blogger.com/info@megawatt.co.il
Next posts - Probably how it all started, pictures - so lacking in our official site. I'm very open to suggestions so post your comments.
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