LoL. Finished this discussion in another thread after Besoeker dropped out of the discussion.
I should spin my head around and exclaim "It's BAaaaACK".
Pragmatically, if all you're servicing on residential 120/240 are 120V outlets; you can call it single-phase or two-phase. It won't matter until you hook up a dryer, water heater, stove, or similar device that wants both hots. To make those devices work the current/voltage must be "In Phase" and "Additive". Leading or lagging "A" or "B" will distort the entire phase "AB" not just "AN" or "BN".
Grounding and measuring from the center of the phase is called "Voltage Division". It's a really basic concept that can be done with either AC or DC voltages. And when we do it with DC voltages no one suddenly pops up and exclaims "It's TWO phase!". And yet ... wait for it ... if we put it on an oscilloscope we can see two amplitudes of opposite polarity! Which strictly speaking is an AC sign wave with an infinite wavelength and/or zero frequency!
When the pilot looks at the skydiver he says he's "down there" while everyone on the ground says he's "up there" and the diver says the pilot is "up" and the onlookers are "down". No matter where you put your probes for the oscilloscope, when the circuit "peaks" - A/B is DOWN while B/A is UP and N is halfway in-between. An oscilloscope tapped at N isn't showing "Phase difference", it's showing "Voltage division"; nothing more.
I should spin my head around and exclaim "It's BAaaaACK".
Pragmatically, if all you're servicing on residential 120/240 are 120V outlets; you can call it single-phase or two-phase. It won't matter until you hook up a dryer, water heater, stove, or similar device that wants both hots. To make those devices work the current/voltage must be "In Phase" and "Additive". Leading or lagging "A" or "B" will distort the entire phase "AB" not just "AN" or "BN".
Grounding and measuring from the center of the phase is called "Voltage Division". It's a really basic concept that can be done with either AC or DC voltages. And when we do it with DC voltages no one suddenly pops up and exclaims "It's TWO phase!". And yet ... wait for it ... if we put it on an oscilloscope we can see two amplitudes of opposite polarity! Which strictly speaking is an AC sign wave with an infinite wavelength and/or zero frequency!
When the pilot looks at the skydiver he says he's "down there" while everyone on the ground says he's "up there" and the diver says the pilot is "up" and the onlookers are "down". No matter where you put your probes for the oscilloscope, when the circuit "peaks" - A/B is DOWN while B/A is UP and N is halfway in-between. An oscilloscope tapped at N isn't showing "Phase difference", it's showing "Voltage division"; nothing more.