mivey
Senior Member
Thanks. It seems simple once you stop trying to tie back to motor coils, # wires, windings, common phraseology, etc.090910-0752 EST
mivey:
Your posts 76 and 79 are excellent.
.
I was reading through texts from the late 1800's and early 1900's along with Wagner & Evans and it was clear that the number of phases is the number of waveforms with different angles (equal magnitudes). I also noticed that sometimes a system is labeled by how the phases were being used instead of using the general case.
It makes it much easier to see how the labels we use were derived. Unfortunately, people spread the labels to a broader case than originally intended. The labels we use are often sub-sets of a more general case.
It can lead to a misunderstanding when you mix multiple systems like in the center-tapped delta or when you have a subset of a regular system, like the two phases of a three-phase Wye system.
It is clear when you look at the type load being served and the # phases being used.