3 phase Voltage

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td1236

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3 phase voltage is 240 between all phases, A phase to ground is 120, B phase to ground is 208 C phase to ground 120.

Why would B phase to ground be 208?
 
As Tom stated it's a 3 phase, 4-wire Delta system. One of the coils has a center tap to provide the 120 volts but has a higher voltage to neutral typically from the B phase.
 
Three Phase Transformer: What Is It? How Does It Work?
 
3 phase voltage is 240 between all phases, A phase to ground is 120, B phase to ground is 208 C phase to ground 120.

Why would B phase to ground be 208?
What everyone else said plus it should have been identified by being 🍊 orange.
 
As Tom stated it's a 3 phase, 4-wire Delta system. One of the coils has a center tap to provide the 120 volts but has a higher voltage to neutral typically from the B phase.
Which, by the original definition makes it not a true "neutral" conductor (same voltage to all ungrounded conductors), but the Code decided to call it one anyway in this context.
 
Which, by the original definition makes it not a true "neutral" conductor (same voltage to all ungrounded conductors), but the Code decided to call it one anyway in this context.
Considering that the high-leg open delta started as a modification to existing 1ph services, I think it still fits.

I can't think of a better term for it, especially to the A_C winding. It's definitely still the grounded conductor.
 
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Considering that the high-leg open delta started as a modification to existing 1ph services, I think it still fits.

I can't think of a better term for it. It's definitely still the grounded conductor.
Whereas, I would say that the white wire started out as a neutral, but stopped being one when the third phase conductor was added. :)
I would just call it the grounded conductor. Among other things, I think the white wire needs to be counted as a CCC in a full boat if the high leg is used for single phase loads.
 
I like the "new" version where we call it a neutral. It's a white conductor that most call a neutral anyway. I never really saw the need to have a distinction between a neutral and a grounded conductor with a 4-wire Delta system.
 
3 phase voltage is 240 between all phases, A phase to ground is 120, B phase to ground is 208 C phase to ground 120.

Why would B phase to ground be 208?
Trigonometry.
Just like was discussed in this thread: https://forums.mikeholt.com/threads/three-phase-ampacity-calculations.2577416/
Refer to the image in post #4 of this thread for the visual representation.

You have a 30-60-90 triangle, know the short leg (120V) and the hypotenuse (240V), and are looking for the long leg.
cos(30)=x/240V
Sqrt(3)/2=x/240V
x=120V*Sqrt(3)
x=208V
 
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… but has no real connection we can utilize
And yet, this question (using the 208V for something) arises here (and elsewhere) surprisingly often. I think if it kind of like having a button on the wall with a sign that says “DON’T PUSH THIS BUTTON!”, there will always be someone who has to push it.
 
And yet, this question (using the 208V for something) arises here (and elsewhere) surprisingly often. I think if it kind of like having a button on the wall with a sign that says “DON’T PUSH THIS BUTTON!”, there will always be someone who has to push it.
What I was getting at was the true neutral of the delta itself is a point in the center of the delta that has no possible way to connect to without some sort of wye connected circuit between the three corners of the delta.
 
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