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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair
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On Thu, 28 Jun 2007 01:45:44 GMT, Gary Tait
wrote: "Tam/WB2TT" wrote in : For instance the wiring to an electric clothes dryer will have two 20 Amp hot wires, a 20 Amp neutral wire (from center tap of transformer), and a 20 amp earth ground wire connected to a cold water pipe or ground rod. Actually a typical US clothes dryer uses a 120/240V 30A circuit. And the ground wire always connects back to the services neutral, where things are grounded with rods and/or plumbing. In some localities, the neutral and ground wires can be tied together at the appliance. They way is was, is that it was permitted to run just a grounded conductor (neutral) to the appliance, and bond that to the case. Since 1996 or so, that has been prohibited, so separate neutral and grounding conductors must be supplied to a 120/240V appliance. I think the only reason for the heavy neutral and ground wires is to make sure the circuit breaker trip in case of a short. As recently as about 20 years ago, a much smaller earth ground wire was used. For the safety ground, yes. For neutral it is assumed, to the terminals in the appliance, that the appliance could draw the full current on the neutral. The electric use meter must be more expensive than an unbalanced single phase one. If you mean the US ones, 2-wire 120/240 ones are the norm, so are made in quantity enough not to be expensive. Most US electric meters, at least the electromechanical kind, have one voltage coil (240 volts, l-l) and two current coils, one in each of the 120 volt phases. That computes power based on an assumption of voltage symmetry, usually a reasonable bet. John |
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