480v Water Heater

rtselectric

Member
Location
Massachusetts
Occupation
Project manager
Call me confused but does this nameplate info make sense? I have done many water heaters but this one seems off to me. The water heater is 480v 1/3ph 4000w and there are only (2) terminals for line side. Am I overthinking this? Shouldn’t it have listed the voltage at 277 or 208?
 

qcroanoke

Sometimes I don't know if I'm the boxer or the bag
Location
Roanoke, VA.
Occupation
Sorta retired........
No. Without seeing the nameplate. 480 is line to line. Not line to neutral
 

kwired

Electron manager
Location
NE Nebraska
Designated as single or three phase isn't out of the ordinary, but should need three line terminals for when configured for three phase operation but would only use two terminals when configured for single phase operation. Would have different current draw for single vs three phase.
 

Jraef

Moderator, OTD
Staff member
Location
San Francisco Bay Area, CA, USA
Occupation
Electrical Engineer
Yeah, the only odd thing here is having only the two terminals. Are you sure it says it can be used with 3 phase? The 3 or 1 phase aspect is not unusual because you just reconfigure how the elements are connected. But you can’t feed it 3 phase without the 3rd terminal.
 

Dennis Alwon

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Chapel Hill, NC
Occupation
Retired Electrical Contractor
Call me confused but does this nameplate info make sense? I have done many water heaters but this one seems off to me. The water heater is 480v 1/3ph 4000w and there are only (2) terminals for line side. Am I overthinking this? Shouldn’t it have listed the voltage at 277 or 208?
I can't imagine why they bought a 480V unit for 4000 watts. The only ones I have done were 3 phase 208v and I don't remember the wattage but it was pretty high and fed with 90 amps or so...
 

kwired

Electron manager
Location
NE Nebraska
I can't imagine why they bought a 480V unit for 4000 watts. The only ones I have done were 3 phase 208v and I don't remember the wattage but it was pretty high and fed with 90 amps or so...
If there is limited amount of 120/208-240 load being supplied maybe lessening size of transformer needed is desirable?

Could end up allowing just a single phase 3-7.5 kW transformer vs say a 15 or 25 or even needing three phase transformer for items needing those lower voltages?
 

roger

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Fl
Occupation
Retired Electrician
I have wired a few 480V water heaters in schools.
 

hillbilly1

Senior Member
Location
North Georgia mountains
Occupation
Owner/electrical contractor
4 kw is pretty small for a 480 volt water heater. WalMart uses them for tenant water heating, but they are much larger. Replaced one a couple of years ago, the new one had a 250 volt thermostat running a contactor @480 volts. No control transformer. Burnt out the thermostat in about a week. Had a hard time finding the right thermostat, but did find one.
 
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