Sure it's single phase but you can put it into a 2 phases of a 3 phase
machine. And if you reference it to neutral, you indeed have 2 phases.
Robert Swinney wrote:
RoyJ sez:
" But many of the transformer welders will run OK on 2 phase at 2/3rds
power."
Little problem with your arithmetic, today RoyJ ? Your reply is totally
misleading. You should know by now from reading posts on RCM, there is no
such thing as 2 phase (generally) available to the home shop machinist.
Bob Swinney
"RoyJ" wrote in message
ink.net...
A static phase converter will not do a thing for a transformer type 3 phase
welder. It might do OK on an old rotary welder. Some one on
sci.engr.joining.welding NG tried a rotary phase converter. Seems to me it
didn't work as well as expected. I suspect that the inductive load from the
welder interacts with the nade up phase from the converter. (Hmmmmm sounds
like a GREAT final exam question for a EE major!)
The output from the transformer goes to a massive diode block,
you are just missing one phase. Not as smooth as full 3 phase but decent.
You may have to experiment with which phase is dead since there will be
fans, control circuits, etc that will be running off a single phase.
Specifics on which make and model you are looking at would be helpful.
Ignoramus15786 wrote:
Just confirming... there is no easy way to make a 3 phase welder run
on 1 phase power, is that right? I would need a full fledged phae
converter to run one, is that true?
i
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