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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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Ok, I've got the opposite problem that most of the people here have
with regards to AC power. I've got a 400 amp 3 phase service in the back half of the building I moved into a few months ago. I'm going to be leasing out this portion of the building and the electric company bills me separately for this panel. What I want to be able to do is have this panel supply the power for this portion of the building so I can have an accurate record of the electrical use for the tenant. I have another 200 amp 3 phase service and 200 amp single phase service for the other portion of the building that I'm using for the shop (RCM related) and living space. My question is how can I tap single phase 110VAC off this panel for regular power for this portion of the building? I've checked the panel in question with a VOM and I get 240 VAC to ground off of each of the two hot leads coming in and the neutral and ground are both connect to the same bus inside the panel. Checking the between both hot leads I also get 240VAC. What am I going to have to do or install to meet my needs? Thanks in advanced for the help. I know some of you guys know what I need to do. Jack Fisher |
#2
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Jack,
Maybe, it's me and I've only had coffee #2 this morning ... but your question reads as if you want to somehow meter 3-phase service and single-phase service for both areas from your location. It would seem the logical solution would be to have the leased area billing put in your tenant's name. Otherwise, combining single-phase and 3-phase service in the same panel would involve the use of transformer(s). This type of question would be much better put to your electric utility. Bob Swinney "Jack Fisher" wrote in message om... Ok, I've got the opposite problem that most of the people here have with regards to AC power. I've got a 400 amp 3 phase service in the back half of the building I moved into a few months ago. I'm going to be leasing out this portion of the building and the electric company bills me separately for this panel. What I want to be able to do is have this panel supply the power for this portion of the building so I can have an accurate record of the electrical use for the tenant. I have another 200 amp 3 phase service and 200 amp single phase service for the other portion of the building that I'm using for the shop (RCM related) and living space. My question is how can I tap single phase 110VAC off this panel for regular power for this portion of the building? I've checked the panel in question with a VOM and I get 240 VAC to ground off of each of the two hot leads coming in and the neutral and ground are both connect to the same bus inside the panel. Checking the between both hot leads I also get 240VAC. What am I going to have to do or install to meet my needs? Thanks in advanced for the help. I know some of you guys know what I need to do. Jack Fisher |
#3
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#4
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![]() Gary Coffman wrote: The third leg, called the high or wild leg in this configuration, will read more than 240 to ground. Not so. The high leg or wild leg, also called the power leg, will be 208 volts to ground. I have some pictures of transformer connections on a web page. Scroll to the bottom of the page to see them. http://murrayranch.com/Electricity.htm . This was found a lot in older installations, but most power companies don't want to provide this any more. Gary Not so, again. This is still widely in use. At the power company I work for we install a lot of these, many in strip malls, supermarkets and small office buildings. Anyplace that has a large 120 load, and need some 3-phase for refrigeration and air conditioning. Don |
#5
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![]() Not so. Semantics. The "third leg", often called the "high leg" or "red leg" really should be called the "orange leg" as all new work is required to indicate this leg with orange wire (small gauges) or orange tape (large gauges). No single-phase loads are permitted on such a leg. |
#6
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On Fri, 11 Jul 2003 01:50:43 GMT, Don Murray wrote:
Gary Coffman wrote: The third leg, called the high or wild leg in this configuration, will read more than 240 to ground. Not so. The high leg or wild leg, also called the power leg, will be 208 volts to ground. I have some pictures of transformer connections on a web page. Scroll to the bottom of the page to see them. http://murrayranch.com/Electricity.htm You're right, sqrt(240^2 - 120^2) = 207.846 volts. . This was found a lot in older installations, but most power companies don't want to provide this any more. Gary Not so, again. This is still widely in use. At the power company I work for we install a lot of these, many in strip malls, supermarkets and small office buildings. Anyplace that has a large 120 load, and need some 3-phase for refrigeration and air conditioning. Nope, you took that one out of a different context. I'm talking about 208 delta there. Your power company may still support it for new work, but none of the ones I know will (though they continue to support it in old work). They want to supply 480 wye instead. It saves them money via smaller cheaper transformers. In a stretched out facility it saves you money too, in reduced copper costs. Gary |
#7
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![]() I'm talking about 208 delta there. Your power company may still support it for new work, but none of the ones I know will (though they continue to support it in old work). They want to supply 480 wye instead. 120/208Y is still the bulk of the new Wye installations, far outpacing 277/480Y. Installations usually follow this sequence (as a function of intended usage and total premises volume): 1) 120/240 center-tap grounded Delta (mixed use, small to medium volume), 2) 120/208 Wye (mostly power, small to medium volume), and 3) 277/480 Wye (industrial, large volume). In (3), a customer-owned "dry type" transformer or transformers is (are) required to provide 120 single-phase, 120/240 single phase or 120/208 Wye and/or 240 Delta three-phase. |
#8
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![]() Gary Coffman wrote: Nope, you took that one out of a different context. I'm talking about 208 delta there. Your power company may still support it for new work, but none of the ones I know will (though they continue to support it in old work). They want to supply 480 wye instead. It saves them money via smaller cheaper transformers. In a stretched out facility it saves you money too, in reduced copper costs. Gary Gary, I don't think I took anything out of context, I am going to cut and paste the paragraph from your original post so you can see why I thought you were talking about 208 wye. "Note you probably don't want to change to 4 wire wye service. That would give you 120 volts to neutral from any leg, but the leg to leg 3 ph voltage would drop to 208. That would require rewiring all your 3 ph motors for 208 instead of 240. This was found a lot in older installations, but most power companies don't want to provide this any more." I've never heard of a 208 delta, other than the high leg on a 240 bank. The determining factor in whether you will get a wye or delta secondary is the voltage of the service. You can see the wye secondary transformer connections on my web page have the secondary coils paralleled. What determines whether the high side is delta or wye is the actual primary voltage of the line and the nameplate rating of the transformer. Where I work, we have a lot of 12KV primary and a 20.8KV primary that we use the same transformers on. The company stocks a lot of 12KV 120/240 transformers. So if you are going to hang a bank to serve a 208V 3-phase service in the 20.8KV you pop the lid off the transformers, parallel the secondary coils, and hang a wye-wye bank. If you wanted a 240V 3-phase bank in the 20.8KV, it would be a wye-delta. If you are hanging these 12KV transformers in the 12KV primary, it would be a delta high-side. And again the secondary configuration would be determined by the secondary voltage you want, 120-208V requires you to parallel the secondary coils and wye the secondary side. 120-240V would be delta secondary. The 20.8KV system is a common neutral system. That is the neutral carried in the secondary position is shared by the primary and secondary, and is a metallic return to the substation. Don |
#9
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#10
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![]() But then the building is supplied with two 13.8 kV feeders. I think we do our own on-site transformations from there on down. Most likely. While at my former employer we NEVER allowed one of our customers to connect to our transmission systems (115 kV ac through 500 kW ac, and 800/1,000 kV dc), we DID allow our large industrial customers/municipal partners to connect to our subtransmission systems (34.5 kV, most, and 69 kV, a few). Note that MOST (but not all) system voltages are multiples of 115 ... 13.8 kV = 120 X 34.5 kV = 300 X 69 kV = 600 X 115 kV = 1,000 X 138 kV = 1,200 X 230 kV = 2,000 X 287.5 kV = 2,500 X (Hoover to L.A., Circuits 1 and 2, e.g., in L.A.'s system) 345 kV = 3,000 X (not used in L.A.'s system, but used within the "Western System", APS, e.g.) But ... 500 kV / 115 = 4347.8261 (Hoover to L.A., Circuit 3, e.g. and the "Western System" ac Intertie, e.g.), and 765 kV / 115 = 6652.1739 ("Eastern System" ac Intertie, e.g.). Oh, well. |
#11
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On Sun, 13 Jul 2003 18:42:32 GMT, Don Murray wrote:
Gary Coffman wrote: Nope, you took that one out of a different context. I'm talking about 208 delta there. Your power company may still support it for new work, but none of the ones I know will (though they continue to support it in old work). They want to supply 480 wye instead. It saves them money via smaller cheaper transformers. In a stretched out facility it saves you money too, in reduced copper costs. Gary Gary, I don't think I took anything out of context, I am going to cut and paste the paragraph from your original post so you can see why I thought you were talking about 208 wye. "Note you probably don't want to change to 4 wire wye service. That would give you 120 volts to neutral from any leg, but the leg to leg 3 ph voltage would drop to 208. That would require rewiring all your 3 ph motors for 208 instead of 240. This was found a lot in older installations, but most power companies don't want to provide this any more." I've never heard of a 208 delta, other than the high leg on a 240 bank. I misspoke (miswrote), I meant 208 wye. Gary |
#12
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#13
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![]() "Bruce L. Bergman" wrote: On Mon, 14 Jul 2003 02:08:02 GMT, someone who calls themselves Don Murray wrote: I'm surprised noone's asked about the lights you have to scroll past on my web page to get to the transformer connections. These lights are old series street lights from what is called an arc circuit. These were fed from a special transformer called an RO. (regulated output) These usually put out a constant 6.6 amps or a few put out 3.3 amps. The voltage varies by the number of lights. This is done with a movable core on a counterbalance. A characteristic of an RO transformer is when you open the circuit, the voltage goes to the maximum, which is slightly above the primary. That's where the term arc circuit comes from. When a light burns out the RO will go up to 5000V and burn through the little wafer you see below the mogul base of the lamp. We still have these in the old part of town in the 4160V area. http://www.murrayranch.com/Electricity.htm Don Just had a chance to go look - oh, /that's/ what they are... (Ever heard of photo captions?) What was the logic behind a series circuit, anything besides saving on wire with just one wire in a big ring? I don't normally put photo captions on that page, as the pictures don't usually stay up very long. I just post them for a specific discussion, or to show a friend. I can't speak to the logic of it, they were designed before my time. I've only been in the business 31 years, some of that stuff is nearly a hundred years old. I suppose the wafer burns through and reconnects the circuit, and the base for the pull-lout socket has bypass contacts so you can replace the lamp and wafer. Hot-Work Gloves Required... That's all correct. Some other working rules on an arc circuit are you never work it hot, but you always work it like it's hot, as it can be wrapped in the 4KV and still be working. You never ground it, and you never open it. You put a shunt across a light when you are working on it. You want odd, I know of a trolley system where they've still got a fully operable GE 2400VAC to 600VDC converter station running and in service, complete with 6-phase transformer and a rotary converter, and dump relays in case it has to scram on an overload and open the output contactor without frying the converter windings. That sounds interesting, I'd like to see pictures of it. Stand there and watch the drum controller go through the automatic start-up and shut-down sequences, and the damned thing looks like a 100% Rube Goldberg design - but it still works ~100 years later... -- Bruce -- Don |
#14
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On Wed, 16 Jul 2003 01:31:59 GMT, someone who calls themselves Don
Murray wrote: "Bruce L. Bergman" wrote: On Mon, 14 Jul 2003 02:08:02 GMT, someone who calls themselves Don Murray wrote: I'm surprised noone's asked about the lights you have to scroll past on my web page to get to the transformer connections. These lights are old series street lights from what is called an arc circuit. These were fed from a special transformer called an RO. (regulated output) These usually put out a constant 6.6 amps or a few put out 3.3 amps. The voltage varies by the number of lights. This is done with a movable core on a counterbalance. A characteristic of an RO transformer is when you open the circuit, the voltage goes to the maximum, which is slightly above the primary. That's where the term arc circuit comes from. When a light burns out the RO will go up to 5000V and burn through the little wafer you see below the mogul base of the lamp. We still have these in the old part of town in the 4160V area. http://www.murrayranch.com/Electricity.htm Just had a chance to go look - oh, /that's/ what they are... (Ever heard of photo captions?) What was the logic behind a series circuit, anything besides saving on wire with just one wire in a big ring? I don't normally put photo captions on that page, as the pictures don't usually stay up very long. I just post them for a specific discussion, or to show a friend. I can't speak to the logic of it, they were designed before my time. I've only been in the business 31 years, some of that stuff is nearly a hundred years old. I suppose the wafer burns through and reconnects the circuit, and the base for the pull-out socket has bypass contacts so you can replace the lamp and wafer. Hot-Work Gloves Required... That's all correct. Some other working rules on an arc circuit are you never work it hot, but you always work it like it's hot, as it can be wrapped in the 4KV and still be working. You never ground it, and you never open it. You put a shunt across a light when you are working on it. Looks like they use the same type system for the series-circuit HPS streetlights in the Valley, with the big pole-mount RO transformers... I've seen the whole string cycle before, probably from one lamp that's at end-of-life and blows out, and knocks the whole string down... All in all, I'll go for regular 120/240/277V feed Cobra-heads, thank you. Easy to troubleshoot and repair, or swap out. And you don't dump the whole circuit because of one bad lamp. You want odd, I know of a trolley system where they've still got a fully operable GE 2400VAC to 600VDC converter station running and in service, complete with 6-phase transformer and a rotary converter, and dump relays in case it has to scram on an overload and open the output contactor without frying the converter windings. That sounds interesting, I'd like to see pictures of it. Orange Empire Railway Museum, Perris CA. www.oerm.org I'll have to see if I have pictures - someone should film it doing a startup/shutdown cycle for historical purposes. Open contactors and arc chutes, brush lifter motors... The best part is the little worm-and-ball 'rotor wiggler' that moves the rotor in the sleeve bearings to keep the brushes from taking a set on the commutator, as it coasts down you can hear the ball coming off one end and going 'plink' as it goes back to the other end of the worm for another cycle... And it should be good for another 100 years, as the GE Shops completely rewound and rebuilt the rotary converter with modern insulation a few years ago - there's a good story behind that one, it was supposed to go in for a dip-and-bake and minor stator coil work (with a fixed bid), and they kept digging... It was the technician's last hurrah before he retired. :-P -- Bruce -- |
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