IWIRE52
Member
- Location
- Houston, Texas
- Occupation
- Electrical Consultant
I am trying to understand why the 175.68 volts instead of 208 volts works on the Hi Leg to calculate the correct total load for a 120/240 Hi Leg Delta system?
Example: You have 100 Amps of 1 phase 120/240 load and 50 amps of 3 phase 240 volt load. You normally calculate the 100 amps of 120/240 load as 24,000VA, and the 50 Amps of 240, 3 phase load as 50x240x1.732=20,784VA, for a total of load of 44,784VA.
Alternately if you calculate the phases independently by their voltage, you get the following:
A phase 150Ax120V=18,000VA
B phase 50Ax208V=10,400VA (Using 120V here as well, is incorrect)
C phase 150Ax120V=18,000VA
Total 18,000VA+10,400VA+18,000VA=46,400VA which is incorrect.
But if you calculate the phases independently this way the result is correct.
A phase 150Ax120V=18,000VA
B phase 50Ax175.68V=8,784VA
C phase 150Ax120V=18,000VA
Total 18,000VA+8,784VA+18,000VA=44,784VA, which is correct.
I have tried it on other configurations and it seems to work using the 175.68 Volts for B Phase (Hi Leg) but I am not sure why this works mathematically?
Example: You have 100 Amps of 1 phase 120/240 load and 50 amps of 3 phase 240 volt load. You normally calculate the 100 amps of 120/240 load as 24,000VA, and the 50 Amps of 240, 3 phase load as 50x240x1.732=20,784VA, for a total of load of 44,784VA.
Alternately if you calculate the phases independently by their voltage, you get the following:
A phase 150Ax120V=18,000VA
B phase 50Ax208V=10,400VA (Using 120V here as well, is incorrect)
C phase 150Ax120V=18,000VA
Total 18,000VA+10,400VA+18,000VA=46,400VA which is incorrect.
But if you calculate the phases independently this way the result is correct.
A phase 150Ax120V=18,000VA
B phase 50Ax175.68V=8,784VA
C phase 150Ax120V=18,000VA
Total 18,000VA+8,784VA+18,000VA=44,784VA, which is correct.
I have tried it on other configurations and it seems to work using the 175.68 Volts for B Phase (Hi Leg) but I am not sure why this works mathematically?