single-phase?

single-phase?


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080411-1837 ESR USA

Consider crossman's very nice diagram. I agree there are three phases available.

The sum of sine waves of the same frequency but different phase angles is still a sine wave.

For illustration purposes. Connect one transformer primary across A to N and a second one from B to N. Connect the two secondaries in series, appropriately phased, and with the correct turns ratio and you can synthesize the third balanced leg C. I believe you will find the turns ratio for each transformer is 1/2. Draw the vector diagram. Note sin 30 or cos 60 is 1/2. The vector component 60 deg from one leg of a 120 V leg to nuetral is 60 V, and 60 + 60 is 120.

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080411-2058 EST USA

If you have at least two magnetic vectors at a suitable angle in physical space and excite these with ac signals of the same frequency that are not in phase, then you get some form of a rotating magnetic field in space. Multiples of 180 degs are not considered out of phase. With a rotating magnetic field you have the basis for a self starting ac motor.

All single phase motors actually have some way of generating the phase shifted magnetic vector, and at least for starting are a form of 2 phase motor.

Also note the correct ratio from a phase to phase 208 for a balanced 3 phase Y is 208/sq-root3 = 208/1.732 = 120.1 and not 117. 117 would relate to 202.6 . As a very rough statement 208/117 is ok, but I like 208/120 better.

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