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[email protected] krw@attt.bizz is offline
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Default 220V dryer sparked on startup (3 wire) What to test?

On Sun, 17 Nov 2013 06:00:57 -0800 (PST), "
wrote:

On Saturday, November 16, 2013 6:03:52 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Sat, 16 Nov 2013 15:09:54 -0600, Mark Lloyd

wrote:



On 11/16/2013 11:09 AM, wrote:


On Sat, 16 Nov 2013 09:54:39 -0700, Tony Hwang


wrote:




wrote:

On Sat, 16 Nov 2013 01:17:23 -0500, Wes Groleau


wrote:




On 11-15-2013, 19:58,
wrote:

180 degrees, but technically, no. It's opposite sign, not 180 degrees


out of phase.




Same thing




No, it's not. It's one phase.




Hi,


It's called bi-phase. aka Edison circuit.




Wrong. It's called "split-phase". ...because that's *exactly* what


it is.




"phase" has a meaning. There's still 2 of them. "split-phase" sounds


right too.




Two-phase is something entirely different (and quite rare).






I think I've heard about that. Are the phases 90 degrees apart?




Yes. From it, any variation or number of phases can be easily

generated (efficiently). It's just a little trig and a transformer.



The fact that there is this different 2 phase system doesn't prevent the


usual one from being 2 phase. That's be like saying you don't have 2


colors of holiday lights if they're just red and green.




Words mean things. The proper term for the Edison connection is

"split-phase". It *is* a single phase that is split by a

center-tapped transformer (center grounded).


But that isn't what you objected to. You objected to someone
saying the two hot legs at the dryer are out of phase by 180 deg
with each other.


Get a life Trader. You were wrong then and you're still wrong. Deal
with it.

That is true as can be seen on a scope.
And when you split something, can you cite
an example where after splitting, you still have just one?


Yes. It's still only one (and it's inverse). Get over your
misconceptions.

I really thought you were an engineer. A "sanitation engineer"
perhaps?