240volt 103" panasonic tv in building with 208v in miami, fl

Status
Not open for further replies.
Hello All. I installed two Panasonic 103" plasma tv's that are 240v 50/60hz 1550 watts. I have a dedicated 208 plus a dedicated 110(or 120) to each. These were 100 grand each in 2006 and are elevated in a lift only lobby situation. I need to make these work. They are separated by an elevator core and the path between them is about 75' if there is one solution for both. I assume some step up transformer. There are about 12 fans on each which is most of the draw. Thanks in advance
 

Dennis Alwon

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Chapel Hill, NC
Occupation
Retired Electrical Contractor
If the 208 volt circuit is dedicated then that would handle both TV... Yes a step up trany would work but are you certain that the TV won't work on 208V
 

GoldDigger

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Placerville, CA, USA
Occupation
Retired PV System Designer
If the 208 volt circuit is dedicated then that would handle both TV... Yes a step up trany would work but are you certain that the TV won't work on 208V

The power supply for the TV would likely work fine on 208, but if the fans are running directly off AC rather than controlled DC their motors might overheat when pushing the required amount of air. If the spec says nominal 230, or say 220-250, best not to risk trying to run them on 208.
I would be perfectly happy to use a boost autotransformer at each TV or a single autotransformer at a common point in the circuit, whichever is more economical to buy and wire.
I do not see any reason to need isolation between the two units, so full power isolation transformers would be, IMHO, a waste of money (and power even when the TVs are turned off.)
An isolation transformer's unloaded primary will draw about ten times the current that the unloaded primary of an autotransformer does.
 

Dennis Alwon

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Chapel Hill, NC
Occupation
Retired Electrical Contractor
The power supply for the TV would likely work fine on 208, but if the fans are running directly off AC rather than controlled DC their motors might overheat when pushing the required amount of air. If the spec says nominal 230, or say 220-250, best not to risk trying to run them on 208.

I agree... I looked up a new unit and it stated 220-240v. I would call Panasonic and see if a trany is necessary.
 

M_J_C

Member
Operational Voltage Range on Panasonic TH-103PF12U

Operational Voltage Range on Panasonic TH-103PF12U

The last batch of 103's we installed years ago ran fine on 208v. The manual on the Panasonic web site states that 200v-240v, 50/60Hz is acceptable.
Panasonic built this to work just about anywhere in the world, since it was so expensive and a limited production.
Do you have a different model?

Specs are on page 65

ftp://ftp.panasonic.com/pub/Panasonic/business/proplasma/manuals/TH-103PF12U_oi.pdf
 

Ingenieur

Senior Member
Location
Earth
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top