Done all the time. At least 90% of Home Depot’s does this to control display panels. It is cheaper to control the primary of the transformer because the contactor is roughly 50% smaller.The project I am on they put a contactor in between the main switch for a 480-volt Transformer so they could control 120 208 panel under a load
Yep, pretty common. You also save on the xformer losses while it's off. Just gotta be sure the contactor is rated for the inductive inrush.Done all the time. At least 90% of Home Depot’s does this to control display panels. It is cheaper to control the primary of the transformer because the contactor is roughly 50% smaller.
And that someone is willing to live with the contactor hum (added to the transformer hum) when it is energized.Yep, pretty common. You also save on the xformer losses while it's off. Just gotta be sure the contactor is rated for the inductive inrush.
Maybe with newer "Smart" contactors you can select a tune rather than a hum True ??:And that someone is willing to live with the contactor hum (added to the transformer hum) when it is energized.
If not, using a latching contactor is the way around that.
If not, I'd be willing to bet someone is now working on making that upon your suggestion...Maybe with newer "Smart" contactors you can select a tune rather than a hum True ??: