- Location
- Tennessee NEC:2017
- Occupation
- Semi-Retired Electrician
This relates to my previous thread(s) concerning 3ph equipment. I have more info to work with.
The oven currently runs on 480V (from a transformer). It is fed with 3ph but the elements are just single ph.
There was some extra/spare elements there, so I measured the resistance on them. They measured19.4 ohms on the elements.
The current draw that I measured on the working elements was 34A. There are 12 elements in the oven.
The oven is being moved to a new building that will only have 120V/240V. They will not have 3ph.
What I want to do is just use the 240V single ph and rewire the elements.
I came up with around 16Kva for the power as it runs now. But that doesn't exactly match the resistance I measured on the spare elements.
480Vsq/19.4ohms = 11.9Kva
I was only able to measure the current but not the voltage as the guy was leaving, so the voltage may not be exactly 480V since its from a 240V to 480V transformer.
I suppose my questions are:
Do I have to take the 12 elements and consider them parallel circuits, or is the 19ohms total R?
If this requires nodal analyzes, it's been too long for me to remember how to do that.
Or to jump ahead and just ask what my current draw would be at the new building using 240V instead of 480V?
The elements currently only come on for 12 secs, then off. So if the voltage is reduced to 240V, would that give enough heat if the time were increased?
Keep in mind, I would only be using 2 legs instead of 3 legs since the new building is single ph.
Ask me any info that I may have left out.
The oven currently runs on 480V (from a transformer). It is fed with 3ph but the elements are just single ph.
There was some extra/spare elements there, so I measured the resistance on them. They measured19.4 ohms on the elements.
The current draw that I measured on the working elements was 34A. There are 12 elements in the oven.
The oven is being moved to a new building that will only have 120V/240V. They will not have 3ph.
What I want to do is just use the 240V single ph and rewire the elements.
I came up with around 16Kva for the power as it runs now. But that doesn't exactly match the resistance I measured on the spare elements.
480Vsq/19.4ohms = 11.9Kva
I was only able to measure the current but not the voltage as the guy was leaving, so the voltage may not be exactly 480V since its from a 240V to 480V transformer.
I suppose my questions are:
Do I have to take the 12 elements and consider them parallel circuits, or is the 19ohms total R?
If this requires nodal analyzes, it's been too long for me to remember how to do that.
Or to jump ahead and just ask what my current draw would be at the new building using 240V instead of 480V?
The elements currently only come on for 12 secs, then off. So if the voltage is reduced to 240V, would that give enough heat if the time were increased?
Keep in mind, I would only be using 2 legs instead of 3 legs since the new building is single ph.
Ask me any info that I may have left out.