I know, I know, another annoying question about calculations...

Last time we talked about this, I mentioned this equation that was devised:
ILamp = (PF * √(VOC^2 - VLamp^2)) / ZBalWhere ILamp is RMS lamp current, PF is distortion power factor, VOC is supply voltage, VLamp is RMS lamp voltage, and ZBal is ballast impedance. I use this equation to determine the power factor:
PF = PLamp / (VLamp * ILamp)Where PLamp is wattage. This is the definition of power factor, is it not? I am pretty sure it is. But something doesn't quite check out here. Here is an example, I am using 35W S68 North American HPS, but this same phenomena happens to most other lamps:
PF = 35 / (55 * .83)
PF = 0.77Cool. So the distortion power factor is 0.77. So let's plug it in and see if we can get the right lamp current with all the other specs being known:
ILamp = (0.77 * √(120^2 - 55^2)) / 116.5ILamp = .7ASo the current is .7A. But no, that is false, it is supposed to be .83A, that is an error of over 15%. I think the power factor is the problem. A while back I calculated average power factors for different technologies (hps, mv, etc) using the more complex of the two equations (not the definition of power factor, the other one). Let's try my calculated HPS average power factor of 0.913. Keep in mind that this value is averaged from across all HPS lamps of which I have specs.
ILamp = (0.913 * √(120^2 - 55^2)) / 116.5ILamp = .84AWell I'll be darned! That new magical PF value gave a result that is within 2% of the actual value. Very nice!
So power factor is the problem. Either the way I am calculating PF is wrong, or the way I am using PF in the big equation is wrong. Which one is it? And thank you all for your continued mathematical help, I think we are on to something here.