Al, who you appear to agree with. thinks 141 watts is the average power of 200 watts peak. He has said so.
No, I have not said that. I have said that 141 watts is the RMS value of a sinusoidal power waveform having a peak of 200 watts. "RMS" in the sense of a mathematically calculated root-mean-square. And in saying that I certainly recognize that the heating which occurs in that example corresponds to 100 watts, not to 141 watts.
On the other hand, though, in citing the 141 watt figure I overlooked the fact that the product of a sinusoidal voltage and a sinusoidal current is not sinusoidal, since it never goes negative in the case of a resistive load. And correspondingly positive power is being delivered to the load at all times, other than at the zero crossings. So I believe the 141 watt figure should be, per one of Kijanki’s posts early in the thread, 0.61 x 200 = 122 watts.
Also, Roger, a **much** better paper on the subject than the Wikipedia writeup Kijanki referred to is the one Imhififan linked to in a post early in the thread:
http://eznec.com/Amateur/RMS_Power.pdf
That author’s conclusions:
It should be noted that the term “RMS power” is (mis)used in the consumer audio industry. In that context, it means the average power when reproducing a single tone, but it’s not actually the RMS value of the power.
Summary:
I’ve shown that:
-- The equivalent heating power of a waveform is the average power.
-- The RMS power is different than the average power, and therefore isn’t the equivalent heating power. In fact, the RMS value of the power doesn’t represent anything useful.
--The RMS values of voltage and current are useful because they can be used to calculate the average power.
Imhififan also provided the following reference early in the thread, which again is highly supportive of Kijanki’s position:
http://www.n4lcd.com/RMS.pdf
In any event, I agree with PTSS that Ralph’s (Atmasphere’s) advocacy of a pragmatic outlook on this issue (see his post dated 6-30-2017) is well stated and appropriate. But in going forward on that basis it seems to me that at the very least we should also acknowledge the legitimacy of Kijanki’s point, that based on a strict interpretation "RMS power" does not equal the product of RMS voltage and RMS current, and therefore does not correspond to the heating effect of a given amount of power.
Regards,
-- Al