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Steven Watkins Steven Watkins is offline
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Default Purpose of shower switch

On Sun, 11 Nov 2018 20:17:49 -0000, NY wrote:

"Rod Speed" wrote in message
...
But they have 115 and 230V in the same house. It's a centre tapped 230V.
Bit of a ****ing mess, but thy can get a decent voltage when needed.


Not practical to do electric showers that way.

That's also the reason they don't use electric jugs
either, not practical to run them on 230V.


Why not? What's the difference between Europe's 220-240V and and US 230V
made up of two 115V supplies? Power-hungry devices like kettles, cookers,
tumble driers and showers can be plugged into (or hard-wired into) the 230V
supply and a centre tap supplies the rest of the house.

Do US house have two wires for 230V live and neutral, with a centre tap
transformer in the house for the rest, or do they have three wires (115V
live, 230V live and neutral) with the centre-tapping done at the substation
rather than at each house?


I believe they have three wires entering the house, from usually one transformer per house on a pole? Unlike in the UK where a transformer powers a whole street or five.

They have common/neutral/whatever it's called, and two hots(lives). They wire the two hots to things like tumble dryers and cookers (ranges/stoves), and take a hot and a neutral to power smaller things like lights.