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Measuring high-power systems #237

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psyhtest opened this issue May 5, 2021 · 3 comments
Open

Measuring high-power systems #237

psyhtest opened this issue May 5, 2021 · 3 comments
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documentation Improvements or additions to documentation

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@psyhtest
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psyhtest commented May 5, 2021

A single-channel analyzer such as YOKOGAWA WT310E with a breakout box such as VOLTCRAFT SMA-10 can measure systems up to 10 Amps (~2.5 kW).

Similarly, a multi-channel analyzer such as YOKOGAWA WT332E and WT333E can support up to 20 Amps (~5 kW) in total (or higher for WT333E?)

Measuring higher-power systems would require several analyzers which the workflow does not support currently.

@psyhtest
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WT1800E supports up to 6 channels.

WT1800E_Rear_no_BOX_M_copy_LG_1

@dmiskovic-NV
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WT333E can support around 7kW powered from 120Vac if using start topology. in case of 240Vac, around 14kW. (appendix3 here https://cdn.tmi.yokogawa.com/IMWT310E-01EN.pdf)

What is the power level we are targeting here? Is it really 36/72kW?

Keep in mind that there are meters (LMG) that if using current shunts can do 100A per element (and they have up to 6 elements)

@araghun
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araghun commented Jun 10, 2021

Got one feedback from Sanjay (SPEC/Intel).

He pointed out to Section 2.4 in this doc.
https://spec.org/power/docs/SPEC-Power_Measurement_Setup_Guide.pdf

This says PTD supports single analyzer for single SUT, multiple analyzers for single SUT and multiple analyzers for multiple SUTs. Of course, these need to be ingrained into the power flow to ensure things go as planned + validation, but there shouldn’t be any limitations based on PTD alone. PTD has the capability to collate data from multiple sources and give one output. He mentioned SPEC allows for power measurements on racks as well and for these they use multiple analyzers on multiple systems (scale-out).

@s-idgunji s-idgunji added the documentation Improvements or additions to documentation label Aug 5, 2022
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