I did not start with Vnb then invert it to get Vbn. I started with Vbn so no inversion was required.
Not that it matters, because eventually the discussion will come back to the fact that Vbn=-Vnb or -Vbn=Vnb.
To get your two waveforms separated by 180? from a single set of terminal B and N requires some type of 'opposite' Two points cannot really have a negative difference, therefore a result containing a negative sign, simply means that the result is opposite the actual difference. Voltage does not really have direction, but we arbitrarily assign one for analysis purposes, thus yielding the equality we have been using for thousands of posts:Vxy=-Vyx.
Lets enter the ideal world that Rattus wants us to be in, at Time t
0 spin your 120/240V generator;
Does a voltage appear between terminals A and N at the same exact time that a voltage occurs between terminals B and N?
Do we have to wait 8.33-10msec (60 or 50hz) before two voltages can be sensed?
Now take the wye system, you keep wanting to bring up, at Time t
0 spin your 208Y/120V generator;
Does a voltage appear between terminals A and N at the same exact time that a voltage occurs between terminals B and N?
Do we have to wait 2.78-3.33msec (60 or 50hz) before any two voltages can be sensed?
During either of the two examples above: Is the generator ever taking away a (i.e. the equivalent of 'producing negative') voltage between any two points? While mathematically accurate, that does not sound good, so how about; Is the generator ever producing a voltage opposite of what it is designed to produce?