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Course: Unit 2: 01.421 Agriculture Mechanics Technology Electrical Wiring Lesson 6: Basic Electrical Terms and Theories QCC: .............................................................................................................. 278, 282, 285, 287 Objectives: 1. Describe the theory of electricity. 2. Define electrical terms. 3. Identify electrical symbols used in diagrams and floor plans. Teaching Time: 2 hours References: Understanding Electricity and Electrical Terms. AAVIM, Winterville, GA. Materials and Equipment: Power Points: Electrical Principles and Wiring Materials Electrical Principles Course: 01.421 Agriculture Mechanics Technology Revised May 2007 Unit 2, Lesson 6 1 Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum TEACHING PROCEDURE Introduction and Mental Set Electricity is one of the major power sources for houses, farm buildings, and Agri-businesses. Understanding how this energy source is produced and delivered to the needed consumer is important. The types of simple wiring circuit used and how to make minor electrical repairs is useful. The maintenance of electrical circuits and equipment properly to ensure their long life and safe operation. Discussion 1. Discuss with students the electrical theory of producing electricity. A. Relationship between Amperes, Volts, and Watts $ Watts=volts x amperes $ Volts=watts/amperes $ Amperes=watts/volts B. Ohms Law $ E=Volts $ I=Amperes $ R=Resistance $ I=E/R $ R=E/I 2. Explain the following terms on the board and have students define: A. Circuit I. Watt B. Conductor J. Kilo-watt hour C. Insulator K. AC D. Ampere L. DC E. Volt M. Single-phase F. Ohm N. Three-phase G. Current O. Flow of current H. Electrical pressure Have an example of each and illustrate if possible. 3. Have a pre-wired parallel and series circuit to illustrate the difference. Illustrate how to read a nameplate on a motor and an electrical tool to show where information can be found in regard to the defined terms. Course: 01.421 Agriculture Mechanics Technology Revised May 2007 Unit 2, Lesson 6 2 Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum SUMMARY Electrical energy is a useful tool in houses, on farms, and in Agribusinesses. The understanding of how this energy is transmitted from electrical power plants to the consumer can be important information. The knowledge and skills learned can prevent injury to people as they use electrical equipment in their homes and on the job. Evaluation Written test Course: 01.421 Agriculture Mechanics Technology Revised May 2007 Unit 2, Lesson 6 3 Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum ELECTRICAL TERMS 1. ELECTRICITY- the flow of electrons 2. CIRCUIT- path followed by electrons from and back to the source. 3. CONDUCTORS- substance which permit electrons to move easily. Examples: copper, aluminum 4. INSULATORS- substances which will not conduct electrons. Examples: glass, rubber, plastic 5. RESISTANCE- the requiring of energy to force electrons from one electron to the next. Determined by: material, size, length 6. OHM- unit of electrical resistance----R 7. VOLTAGE (VOLTS)- measure of electrical pressure----E 8. AMPERE (AMPS)- measure of electrical current flow----I 1 amp= 6,280,000,000,000,000,000 electrons per second *************DETERMINES WIRE SIZE NEEDED****************** Course: 01.421 Agriculture Mechanics Technology Revised May 2007 Unit 2, Lesson 6 4 Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum 9. WATTAGE (WATTS)- measure of electrical power *********WATTS= VOLTS x AMPS*********** VOLT.AMPERE- new term for wattage *********AMPS= WATTS/VOLTS************* *********VOLTS= WATTS/AMPS************* Examples: 120 volts x 10 amps = watts 120 x 10= 1200 2400 watts / 120 volts = amps 2400/120= 20 240 volts / 1800 watts = amps 1800/240= 7.5 2400 watts / 10 amps = volts 2400/10= 240 10. OHMS LAW- the electrical current flowing in a circuit varies directly with the electrical pressure and inversely with the opposition I=E/R amps= volts/ohms 11. KILLOWATT- 1000 watts 12. KILOWATT HOUR- watts x hours/1000 13. HORSEPOWER- used to rate electric motors 1 HP- 1000 watts Theoretical horsepower= 746 watts ******TO CHANGE HORSEPOWER TO WATTS******** 1000 WATTS/HP FOR 1/2 OR LARGER 1200 WATTS?HP FOR <1/2 Course: 01.421 Agriculture Mechanics Technology Revised May 2007 Unit 2, Lesson 6 5 Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum 14. DC- direct current-flows in only one direction 15. AC- alternating current-flows in one direction then the other. Cycle repeats 60 times per second 60 hertz 16. SINGLE PHASE- 1 transformer, 3 wires from pole to house, 2 "hot" 1 neutral, 120 and 240 volts 17. THREE PHASE- 3 transformers, 4 wires, 3 "hot" 1 neutral used where large quantities of power are needed18. AMPACITY- current rating in amperes that a conductor can carry continuously without exceeding its temperature rating 19. BONDING- the grounding of all metal enclosures of electrical wiring and equipment *non-current carrying parts of the electrical system *equipment ground provides low impedance path for fault current to flow back to the system ground *necessary for over current protection device to operate properly 20. BRANCH CIRCUIT- the conductors between the final overcurrent device and the outlets *appliance- 20ampere, supplying outlets for the connection of appliances *general purpose- 15 or 20 ampere, supply outlets for lighting and receptacles not in kitchen *individual- supplies only one piece of equipment *multiwire- 2 or more ungrounded (hots) with a neutral or grounded conductor can serve as 2 separate 2 wire circuits 25% fewer conductors voltage drop reduced as much as 50 % reduced conduit size 21. CIRCUIT BREAKER- type of overcurrent protection device 22. CONTINUOUS LOAD- the current is expected to continue for 3 hours or more *conductors are rated for 100% continuous loading *overcurrent protection devices are limited to 80% of the device rating 23. DEVICE- unit of an electrical system that is intended to carry but not consume electricity Course: 01.421 Agriculture Mechanics Technology Revised May 2007 Unit 2, Lesson 6 6 Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum 24. DISCONNECTING MEANS- device or group of devices that disconnects the main power supply conductors 25. FEEDER- the circuit conductors between the service equipment and the branch circuit overcurrent device 26. GROUNDED- the intentional connection to earth 27. GROUNDING ELECTRODE CONDUCTOR- the conductor used to connect the grounding electrode (Ground rod) to the grounded conductor at the service 28. OVERCURRENT- current greater than the rated current of equipment or conductors *overload *Short circuit *ground fault 29. SERVICE CONDUCTORS- conductors on the supply side of service disconnect Course: 01.421 Agriculture Mechanics Technology Revised May 2007 Unit 2, Lesson 6 7 Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum EXAM 1. Electricity is the flow of electrons from one ____________ to another. 2. The flow of electricity is controlled in an electric ________________. 3. Atoms contain _______________ and _________________. 4. Each proton has a _______________ charge. 5. Each electron has a ______________ charge. 6. _____________ are attached to protons. 7. The number of electrons and the number of protons are exactly equal in a _________________ atom. 8. The continuing flow of electrons is referred to as _______________. 9. In a light bulb filament, energy is given off as _____________ and __________________. 10. Two protective devices that prevent too much current from flowing are a __________________ and _______________. 11. Two basic types of circuits are the _________________ and the _________________ circuit. 12. Are most circuits in your home parallel or series circuits? 13. Copper, aluminum and silver are examples of good electrical _______________. 14. Five examples of good insulators are __________, __________, __________, __________, and __________. 15. The __________ is the unit used to define electric current. 16. To measure current flow (amperes) you use an instrument called an ___________________. Important information such as ampere rating is listed on the equipment _________________. 17. 18. Electrical pressure is defined by a unit called________________. Course: 01.421 Agriculture Mechanics Technology Revised May 2007 Unit 2, Lesson 6 8 Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum 19. How can you determine if three-wire service is supplied to your house_________________. 20. The unit of electrical resistance is the _________________. 21. What are the three factors that determine the amount of resistance (ohms) in a conductor? 22. Define Ohms law. 23. What are the equations used to express Ohms law? 24. Electric power is measured in terms of _____________. 25. A kilowatt is equal to ____________ watts. 26. You may purchase electrical energy in the form of ______-hours. 27. The two types of current are ___________ current and _________ current. 28. The type of current that flows in only one direction is __________ current. 29. ____________ current is the type of current that flows in one direction, reverses, then flows in the other direction. Course: 01.421 Agriculture Mechanics Technology Revised May 2007 Unit 2, Lesson 6 9 Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum Exam Answers 1. place 2. circuit 3. electrons and protons 4. positively 5. negatively 6. neutrons 7. neutral 9. current 10. light and heat 11. fuses and circuit breakers 12. parallel and series 13. parallel circuits 14. conductors 15. Glass, vinyl, rubber, asbestos, air and wood are all acceptable. 16. ampere 17. ammeter 18. name plate 19. volts 20. 21. Single-phase service uses three wires: two hot and one neutral ground. Three-phase service uses four wires: three hot wires and one ground. ohms 22. length of run, cross sectional area, and temperature of the conductor Course: 01.421 Agriculture Mechanics Technology Revised May 2007 Unit 2, Lesson 6 10 Georgia Agriculture Education Curriculum 23. Volts equal the amperes multiplied by the resistance. 24. Volts = E, Amperes = I, and Resistance = R E = I x R or I = E / R or 25. 1000 26. kilowatt 27. direct and alternating 28. direct 29. alternating R=E/ I Course: 01.421 Agriculture Mechanics Technology Revised May 2007 Unit 2, Lesson 6 11