ENG2009
Electrical
- Jun 12, 2009
- 9
I am trying to calculate the efficiency of a 3-phase 480V power supply that outputs 10.5 volts DC at 840 amps. The purpose is to see how much we can save in electricity by using a newer more efficient power supply. We are not charged for power factor by our electric utility. I've got a Fluke quality analyzer logging the inputs, which are:
Volts1 = 480.9
Amps1 = 17.29
Volts2 = 473.5
Amps2 = 17.4
Volts3 = 477.0
Amps3 = 14.6
Power Factor = .72
I want see how efficient the P/S is by comparing the input watts to the output watts. I wasn't sure if I needed to take into account power factor. I calculated:
Input KW = ((V1*A1) + (V2*A2) + (V3*A3))/1000 = 23.56KW
Output KW = (10.5 VDC x 840 Amps) / 1000 = 8.82 KW
The efficiency would then be 8.82/23.56 = 37%. This means that 63% or 14.7KW would have to be turned into heat, sound and vibration by the power supply. That sounds like way too much wasted energy. This power supply is about the size of a full server rack and it gets warm, of course, but not that hot. Am I missing something?
Volts1 = 480.9
Amps1 = 17.29
Volts2 = 473.5
Amps2 = 17.4
Volts3 = 477.0
Amps3 = 14.6
Power Factor = .72
I want see how efficient the P/S is by comparing the input watts to the output watts. I wasn't sure if I needed to take into account power factor. I calculated:
Input KW = ((V1*A1) + (V2*A2) + (V3*A3))/1000 = 23.56KW
Output KW = (10.5 VDC x 840 Amps) / 1000 = 8.82 KW
The efficiency would then be 8.82/23.56 = 37%. This means that 63% or 14.7KW would have to be turned into heat, sound and vibration by the power supply. That sounds like way too much wasted energy. This power supply is about the size of a full server rack and it gets warm, of course, but not that hot. Am I missing something?