drcampbell
Senior Member
- Location
- The Motor City, Michigan USA
- Occupation
- Registered Professional Engineer
Well, "dampening" is the act of adding water to something.maybe not if they are wet?
("damping" is diminishing/attenuating)
Well, "dampening" is the act of adding water to something.maybe not if they are wet?
I remember one installation I was involved with having three stacked pretty much directly on each other. Reinforcement was added so the lid of the lower one(s) wasn't bearing all the load above it.
The air temperature within a building has never been an issue with the transformers we install. Maybe it's because these things are over engineered to the point where they don't even get hot. I've never even touched a transformer case that was anything more than warm.Ambient temp and air circulation factor into what you might be able to get away with. The application I had also had a large vacuum pump in same room that produced fair amount of heat when running. This room was power ventilated though and other than fact it had a roof over it was about like having it outdoors on north side of the building ambient temp wise.
I was wondering about the heat issue of having a bunch of transformers in an electrical room, like Roger's picture post #16... Say you have 4 @ 75KVA, probably 98% efficient? That is 6KW of heat. I guess most stuff is lightly loaded though.The air temperature within a building has never been an issue with the transformers we install. Maybe it's because these things are over engineered to the point where they don't even get hot. I've never even touched a transformer case that was anything more than warm.
The OP is questioning whether or not this is a good practice and I'm saying we do it all of the time without issue.
The electrical closets in hospitals typically have multiple transformers.I was wondering about the heat issue of having a bunch of transformers in an electrical room, like Roger's picture post #16... Say you have 4 @ 75KVA, probably 98% efficient? That is 6KW of heat. I guess most stuff is lightly loaded though.
I have 75kva transformer bottom and on top i have 45kva transformer. I dont see anything that prohibits NEC 2017 transformer stacking but could be wrong. Is their anything I need to look out for or is in NEC 2017 regarding transformer stack on top of each.