Alwayslearningelec
Senior Member
- Location
- NJ
- Occupation
- Estimator
Ahhhh. What is the 1.732 for?It's 3 phase so you need to factor 1.732 into your formula. 72000/361
One answer is the 208V is the L-L voltage, but you are using 3 lines, so obviously you need to divide by some additional amount, and it turns out to be sqrt(3).Ahhhh. What is the 1.732 for?
Thanks.One answer is the 208V is the L-L voltage, but you are using 3 lines, so obviously you need to divide by some additional amount, and it turns out to be sqrt(3).
Another answer is that if you start with the "VA / 120V L-N / 3 lines" formula as correct, if you switch the voltage from 120V to 208V (which is just 120V * sqrt(3)), then you have to reduce the extra divisor of 3 lines to 3 / sqrt(3) = sqrt(3).
Cheers, Wayne

It's 16128 VA of load, shown as 8064 VA of load on each line conductor.I may be having a brain fart but I fail to see the 80-64 load on a HVAC with 15kw heat.
sqrt(3) applies to 3-phase, but not to single phase.Ok so in this panel schedule they give the calculated load and went about it differently then my 1st pic above. So is it the same end result( a calculated load) but just going about it two different ways?
Also this a 1 phase panel and calculated load is 93amps. I could feed it with a 2P-100A breaker?
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