interesting piece of trivia: In 2003ish, there was a major power outage across the northwestern US and much of eastern Canada. One major issue was that the grid became desynchronized so resynchronizing was a major problem they had to solve to bring the grid back up. The province of Quebec uses high voltage DC lines (and also massive amounts of hydroelectric power, but that's a conversation for another day) so they didn't have that same problem and had returned their power to normal long before the rest of the region.
Comment on TIL the cost of transporting energy around
gandalf_der_12te@feddit.org 2 weeks ago yeah, AC won during the current wars in 1900, mostly because efficient transformers were only available for AC at the time.
nowadays DC is often used for high-power long-distance transport though.
sj_zero 2 weeks ago federation: confirmed
wewbull@feddit.uk 1 week ago
No such thing as a DC transformer. Transformers rely on generating a changing magnetic field and for that you need AC.
well, technically, the term transformer refers to any device that converts the wave-form from one form to another. so a rectangle -> triangle converter would be a transformer.in most cases, though, it’s only used in the sense of “voltage converter”. and these exist for AC and DCnvm
wewbull@feddit.uk 1 week ago
No, a transformer is a thing invented by Michael Faraday that uses magnetic fields to move energy between sets of windings.
A “rectangle -> triangle converter” is an inverter, and that coupled with a transformer and rectifier would be a way of stepping down a DC voltage (but not the only way).
The more general term you’re looking for is a “converter”.
yeah huh what
i remember reading an article about this but i can’t find it anymore
nvm you’re right