wwhitney
Senior Member
- Location
- Berkeley, CA
- Occupation
- Retired
OK, I went through the math and you are correct, the Scott-T will produce a balanced loading on the 3 phase supply from a balanced loading on the 2 phase secondary.My understanding is if the 2 phase loads are balanced it does produce a balanced 3 phase load.
I think the current carrying capacity of the coils in the Scott-T transformer is used less efficiently than in a hexaphase arrangement, as in the Scott-T the primary coil with the center-tap has to carry out-of-phase currents even for purely resistive loads. I.e. say you are starting with split-primary/split secondary single phase transformers, which also have a 86.6% tap on the primary side, and you are considering building a Scott-T from them, or a hexaphase arrangemen. Then for a given kVA nameplate of transformers, the hexaphase will give you the full kVA available on the secondary, while the Scott-T will give you less.
Cheers, Wayne