here are some good graphics of the subject might help
http://www.mhprofessional.com/downloads/products/0071467890/0071467890_ch15.pdf
http://www.mhprofessional.com/downloads/products/0071467890/0071467890_ch15.pdf
I'm 100% sure that, whatever emerges from that open winding, it won't be the 'missing' phase somehow 'synthesized' from the other two phases.I believe that on a three leg core, you would have flux that goes through leg 1, and voltage developed on all three secondary phases. But I'm stuck figuring out how much voltage would be developed and what its phase angle would be.
I'm 100% sure that, whatever emerges from that open winding, it won't be the 'missing' phase somehow 'synthesized' from the other two phases.
Floating neutral....
Not good.
If you don't connect the transformer primary neutral to the supply neutral, you can't be sure that the transformer line to neutral voltages will be the same as the supply line to neutral voltages.
The supply NEUTRAL IS CONNECTED TO GROUND at the supply transformer. Since there is no L/N loads connected, onle a three phase transformer it is unnecessary to bring the neutral. The source's connection to ground assures that the power supply is NOT floating in relationship to the ground.
Laszlo,
I believe that you are missing a key point.
In the situation that you describe, with a wye primary, with the common terminal of the wye 'floating', what is the voltage between that primary common terminal and the supply neutral?
If, instead of a wye connected transformer primary, you had a set of wye connected resistive loads, than the answer is quite clear: the 'floating' common terminal voltage would depend upon the particular load balance, and with perfectly balanced loads, the 'floating' common terminal voltage would be 0 relative to the supply neutral.
If you have a wye to wye transformer, with the primary common terminal 'floating', what mechanism holds the primary common terminal at neutral voltage? Does this mechanism work even if there is unbalanced loading on the secondary side? If the primary common terminal is not at neutral voltage, won't the secondary voltage be unbalanced relative to the secondary neutral?
-Jon
Either you bring the supply transformer neutral along and NOT ground it at the transformer, or not and still not ground the common point. Since you do NOT have a neutral you should NOT use a Y/Y trasnformer.
I don't understand the above. Assume a grounded wye source feeding a Y/Y transformer with the secondary X0 properly grounded and the primary H0 not connected to anything.The supply transformer grounding will force the U/I ratio to follow the supply.
1.) The source neutral grounding will establish the sink point and the voltage reference.I believe that the above points to a language misunderstanding. I have not been suggesting that the H0 terminal needs to be _grounded_ in a Y/Y transformer. I have been saying that the HO terminal needs to be connected to the source _neutral_ conductor.
Note that going back to the first page, the original post states that the source is a delta with no neutral, meaning that the whole discussion of connecting the supply neutral to H0 is moot with respect to the original post. (whoops)
I don't understand the above. Assume a grounded wye source feeding a Y/Y transformer with the secondary X0 properly grounded and the primary H0 not connected to anything.
1) What does the source grounding have to do with anything?
2) Given unbalanced loading on the secondary, won't the H0 voltage shift in order to maintain balanced current through all three legs on the primary side? Phase A current on the primary side must balance phase B and C, after all.
3) Is there some mechanism by which the phase B and C current on the primary side can cause phase A current on the secondary side, so that you can have balanced current flow on the primary side with unbalanced current flow on the secondary side?
Thanks
Jon
2.) The unbalanced secondary loading will casue the CURRENT change in each phase of the primary.