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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 alt.energy.homepower,alt.engineering.electrical,sci.electronics.repair,sci.physics.electromag
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On May 13, 10:30 pm, wrote:
Is this the system where the voltage is 133 volts relative to ground and 230 volts between phases (and formerly 127 volts relative to ground and 220 volts between phases)? Since I'm posting from GoogleGroups I can't respond to Phil, but the rest of you can be enlightened. In 120/240 or similar systems there is not the freedom to choose this ratio. The wiring of the source transformer determines it. As others have noted, in the "Edison" U.S. system the source is a center tapped transformer with the center tap grounded. This makes a two phase system with each 120v "leg" 180 degrees out of phase with the other one. The ratio of the high voltage (240v) and the low voltage (120v) is always therefore 2:1. In a three phase system there will be three transformers with secondaries (one for each phase) wired in a "star" or "Y" configuration. This is necessary because you need the center point of the "star" or "Y" to be ground for each low voltage phase. If you wire with a "delta" configuration there is no central grounding point available for the individual phases. IN three phase circuits the relationship between that individual phases to ground (say 120v) and the voltage measured between phases is not arbitrary. It is always determined by the square root of 3. Hence the between phase voltages being sqrt 3 x 120 = 208V. Just like the two phase system these ratios are determined by physics and can't be arbitrarily set. Of course there is the issue that electric companies often will name a voltage one thing while actually supplying an other for small variations about the "standard" voltage. |
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