We have used 690V on some industrial projects.What about 690Y400V ?
We have used 690V on some industrial projects.What about 690Y400V ?
Thank you.I think European conformity was around the early sixties starting with the common market.
I see I misread the original post. For some reason I had read it as the load transformer primary connected high leg to neutral, which would be hokey. It would probably work with no effort but that would be hokey.Hello all, I'm new to the forum and have what may or may not be a silly question. At work we have a delta high leg service, A and C are 120v phase to ground, and B is around 200v to ground. There is a machine at work that utilizes a 220v/110v transformer, this being fed by 2 legs of said service. Does it matter if the high leg feeds on side of the primary winding, or should they both be the 120v legs. Can this cause a funky issue with the neutral on the secondary?
Where is that, or was that ever common?....Most common mistake I see with red leg deltas is the transformer specc'd when they're planning all single phase loads.
There is a large old industrial building I *reluctantly* work on that has a 240V delta (used to be an open delta, I had it converted to full delta) the building has been converted from manufacturing to 'loft space'. Many of the 240V loads are now single phase including 240V lighting, servers, water heaters, kilns, smaller motors (less than 5 HP) etc, the only 3 phase load is a HVAC on the roof and the elevators. Since the elevators, HVAC, parking-lot lighting and other lighting is 240V there is not much 120V load it did not make sense to convert it to a 208Y120. I imagine these type of repurposed buildings are common.Where is that, or was that ever common?
The old ones were common for machine shops for full 240V 3 phase. That's probably from the 1950's around here. Usually the utility supply transformer and I've never recommended changing the service when we have something that works. Old machine shops were common around here in large old industrial buildings, probably WW11 era. Lots of those.That's a far cry from a delta xformer being specc'd and especially one to be used with all single phase loads.
The last 240V delta I installed wasn't specc'd, it was ordered by mistake. The only one I've ever put in that was specc'd was for a printing press.