Alwayslearningelec
Senior Member
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- Estimator
There's nothing unusual about dual-voltage 1ph motors.Why would it list this as 115 & 230v? It says it single phase.
It's a single phase dual voltage motor. Extremely common for small HP motors you can field wire it for either voltage.
It has two winding groups that you can opt to either wire in series for 230V, or in parallel for 115V. There's a tap selector on the motor that allows you to chose which winding arrangement you want to use. Motors are usually rated slightly less than the nominal voltage of the grid, because it anticipates some voltage drop. It's still meant to connect to either a nominal 240V or 120V grid respectively.
It's mathematically equivalent in the ideal case, to two 120V waveforms that are 180 degrees out of phase.I think he thinks single phase would be only 120, not 240 since it’s both and A&B phase and not -“single phase”
But doesn't 115v wiring mean 1 hot and 240 mean 2 hots?It's a single phase dual voltage motor. Extremely common for small HP motors you can field wire it for either voltage.
Yes. But they aren't separate phases by strict definition. They are separate live conductors that ultimately come from the same phase.But doesn't 115v wiring mean 1 hot and 240 mean 2 hots?
Geez some of that is a little confusing. So for the case I posted you could wire it to a single pole or two pole breaker?Yes. But they aren't separate phases by strict definition. They are separate live conductors that ultimately come from the same phase.
They are mathematically equivalent to two separate phases, but not considered to be two separate phases due to how they are produced in contrast to how 3-phase power is produced.
240V also doesn't necessarily mean 2 hots, since rest-of-world voltages would produce 240V (or something in its immediate neighborhood), from a single phase and neutral, instead of 2 hot conductors.
Yes single pole 120 volts, two pole 208 or 240 depending on the system. Either way it's still single phase.Geez some of that is a little confusing. So for the case I posted you could wire it to a single pole or two pole breaker?
If you need 1 hot conductor, you wire it to a single pole breaker and the neutral.Geez some of that is a little confusing. So for the case I posted you could wire it to a single pole or two pole breaker?
This gets to what the definition of a "phase" is.It's mathematically equivalent in the ideal case, to two 120V waveforms that are 180 degrees out of phase. . . . It just isn't called 2-phase
For the case of a pure sine wave, the usual starting idealization for these discussions, the two notions are equivalent, as sin(theta + 180 deg) = -sin(theta). But you are correct for other cases, e.g. if there is a DC component to the voltage.They are not 180 degrees out of phase. They are opposite in polarity.
Would a single phase 208 volt circuit be two sine waves 120° apart?If there are only two conductors, there can only be one phase, a sine wave.
Nope. Between the two conductors is still a single, symmetrical sine wave.Would a single phase 208 volt circuit be two sine waves 120° apart?