Why different frequencies and different voltage levels for electrical supply systems around the world??
Europe
and most other countries in the world use a voltage which is twice that
of the US. It is between 220 and 240 volts, whereas in Japan and in
most of the Americas the voltage is between 100 and 127 volts.
The system of three-phase alternating
current electrical generation and distribution was invented by a
nineteenth century creative genius named Nicola Tesla. He made many
careful calculations and measurements and found out that 60 Hz (Hertz,
cycles per second) was the best frequency for alternating current (AC)
power generating. He preferred 240 volts, which put him at odds with
Thomas Edison, whose direct current (DC) systems were 110 volts. Perhaps
Edison had a useful point in the safety factor of the lower voltage,
but DC couldn't provide the power to a distance that AC could.
When
the German company AEG built the first European generating facility,
its engineers decided to fix the frequency at 50 Hz, because the number
60 didn't fit the metric standard unit sequence (1,2,5). At that time,
AEG had a virtual monopoly and their standard spread to the rest of the
continent. In Britain, differing frequencies proliferated, and only
after World War II the 50-cycle standard was established. A big mistake,
however.
Not
only is 50 Hz 20% less effective in generation, it is 10-15% less
efficient in transmission, it requires up to 30% larger windings and
magnetic core materials in transformer construction. Electric motors are
much less efficient at the lower frequency, and must also be made more
robust to handle the electrical losses and the extra heat generated.
Today, only a handful of countries (Antigua, Guyana, Peru, the
Philippines, South Korea and the Leeward Islands) follow Tesla’s advice
and use the 60 Hz frequency together with a voltage of 220-240 V.
Originally
Europe was 110 V too, just like Japan and the US today. It has been
deemed necessary to increase voltage to get more power with less losses
and voltage drop from the same copper wire diameter. At the time the US
also wanted to change but because of the cost involved to replace all
electric appliances, they decided not to. At the time (50s-60s) the
average US household already had a fridge, a washing-machine, etc., but
not in Europe.
The
end result is that now, the US seems not to have evolved from the 50s
and 60s, and still copes with problems as light bulbs that burn out
rather quickly when they are close to the transformer (too high a
voltage), or just the other way round: not enough voltage at the end of
the line (105 to 127 volt spread !).
Note
that currently all new American buildings get in fact 230 volts split
in two 115 between neutral and hot wire. Major appliances, such as
ovens, are now connected to 230 volts. Americans who have European
equipment, can connect it to these outlets
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