ggunn
PE (Electrical), NABCEP certified
- Location
- Austin, TX, USA
- Occupation
- Consulting Electrical Engineer - Photovoltaic Systems
Like I said earlier, that was hard for me to wrap my head around at first, too. It's not intuitive just looking at the waveforms that the difference between two sine waves 120 degrees apart (which is what a load sees when you connect it across two legs of three phase power) is a sine wave as well. Or any phase difference apart, for that matter. Only the amplitude is affected by the amount of phase shift, not the shape of the wave.It is clear that the OP seems to think that there are two waveforms. I've been trying to dispel that notion in my responses to his questions. Simply saying "its just single phase" isn't going to clarify the situation for the OP. If the OP grasped the concept that "its just single phase," he wouldn't be asking the questions he's asking.
It would have an effect if it were a three wire system with two of the three phases and a neutral, but I don't think anyone does that.
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