- Location
- Wisconsin
- Occupation
- PE (Retired) - Power Systems
Smart $ said:Diagram SP-6 is not limited to 216 to 240. Look at the second page for type Y xfmrs, at the bottom of of the 208 to 240 column.
That is the thing about buck-boost transformers... the output voltage will vary with the loading of it. No load condition was set in the OP problem. While Jim Dungar is basically correct in his post above regarding the physics of it, I disagree with his comment about manufacturer's literature, because loading must be take into account for a specific output voltage.
All transformers are chosen based on their nominal open circuit voltage be they 7200-120/240, 480-208Y/120 or 120-24V units.
The nominal voltage changes available with a 120/240-12/24 transformer connected in buck-boost using standard additive connections are: 5%, 10%, and 20%. For a 120/240-16/32 they are 6.6%, 13.3% and 26.6%. The formulas for determining the voltages are: HV = LV*(1+%) and LV = HV/(1+%). It does not matter whose transformers they are. It does not matter if the transformer bank is 1-phase, 3-phase open delta, or 3-phase wye.
How close you get to any specific output L-L voltage depends on how many digits you use in your calculations, and what number you start with. Remember there is no such thing as an actual 208Y/120, it is actually 207.8Y/120.