<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13201128#post13201128 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by BigJay
The power company supplies us with volt-amperes, but they bill us for watts.
Resistive loads like incandescent lights have a power factor of 1.0, meaning 1 KVA supplied = 1 KW used. Power factors below 1.0 require a utility to generate more than the minimum volt-amperes necessary than the watts actually used.
Normal power factor ballasts have a power factor of (0.4 to 0.6). You have the same problems with computer power supplies and wall-wart transformers that cause capacitive and inductive loads that have a power factor less than 1.
In a nutshell yes...

(see Marc, he explained much faster and without as many words as I would have!)
It's splitting hairs really, my CFL's are 8 watts, so I'm paying for 8 watts of power. The power company has to supply 16 volt-amps or so of power to keep them going due to the power factor. That's still less than 60 or even 100 volt amps from an incandescent bulb at unity power factor. I get the same 60 watts worth of lumens. This argument against CFL seriously fails.
When looked at from the homeowner perspective sure it fails
However, when looked at from the powerhouse side, it is a disaster that severely skews the Reactive/Real power balance on the grid. It is a nightmare that engineers have only begun to worry about. CFLs poor power factor is not from the normal (clean) DSP type of loss (Displacement Power Factor) but rather caused by harmonic losses. CFL bulbs are more than a little noisy... So why not place harmonic/PF correction in each ballast in each bulb? 1) cost 2) Filtering the low freq harmonics will help the PF but in turn opens another can of worms by turning each CFL into a high freq disturbance on the network.
Only part of their concern is total kVa. When the total PF dips below .8 (or someplace around there from what I understand) things get squirelly and really bad things start to happen.
Also many common CFL bulbs have PFs in the .5 (Or worse) range.
LOW PF and high harmonics are very hard on everything on the grid, from distro transformers to your clock radio to arc furnaces. Equipment failures will skyrocket and outages will be certainly result. (not that any of it will ever be attributed to power quality).
The Aug 2003 blackout was partly due to a lack of reactive power on the grid caused by a high load, high harmonics and a low PF.
So splitting hairs? Maybe in some aspects, but it is certainly a valid topic that is going to be (or is already) being worked on by many an grid engineer.
Besides, do you really feel bad about robbing the energy companies a little by using the same CFL bulbs that they are outright asking everyone to use?
The private power companies are not asking everybody to use them, the govt and greenies are
I don't feel bad about not being billed for poor PF, the point was that SOMEBODY has to pay for it anyway, and that SOMEBODY just passes the bill back along to you and me anyway. If we flood the grid with 40% CFL lighting, YOU AND I are going to pay the billions of dollars in grid upgrades that will be needed to keep the power clean (along with the bill for the disposal of the used bulbs and the govt offices that waste money managing the whole boondoggle).
No such thing as a free lunch
