On May 29, 12:32�pm, George wrote:
On 5/29/2010 3:14 AM, harry wrote:
On May 28, 10:55 pm, �wrote:
On 5/28/2010 3:44 PM, harry wrote:
On May 28, 6:31 pm, Tom � wrote:
On May 27, 5:22 pm, "Stormin Mormon"
� wrote:
Oh, thank you. I didn't know.
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
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� wrote in message
...
No, it's 220 more or less, to ground
It is entirely possible that the 440 volts is from a delta configured
transformer that is not ground referenced or is corner grounded.
Point is that one shouldn't assume that the transformer that is
supplying the current is Y configured.
--
Tom Horne
It's only possible to determine how a three phase transformer is
connected visually. Ie by checking the connections.
You can make a very reliable determination with just a meter and knowing
how 3 phase AC works.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
That is completely wrong.
Really? So if we take the original question where the OP could have used
their meter and as an example observed 480 VAC between each phase leg
and 277 from each phase leg to neutral we couldn't declare with
confidence that the source transformers were connected in "Y" ?- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
If you read my post, If there are just three line connections brought
out, no, you can't tell whether its "star" or "delta" connected.