Imagine a single 120V load between L1 and N. Then half the load current is supplied directly from the 240V source. The other half is supplied by winding L1-N. Check it out.
Hmmm... please elaborate. I'm not getting what you are describing.![]()
Smart,
Give me a basic diagram, and I will draw in the currents for you.
Now how is that supposed to work? You want me to draw you a basic diagram of something you are describing that I do not get...
Is the OP diagram basic enough?
If you are describing an autotransformer that is powered by 240V and outputs 120/240, your description is valid... but I have read the entire thread, and I am thinking the gist is using an autotransfomer setup with a 120V supply to get 120/240 with a *real* neutral. Did I miss something along the way???
Here it is![]()
Here it is
Already done it Smart. Didn't scan it either. Thanx tho.
The crux of the matter is that that V12 is loaded with the series combination of the actual load and the same load reflected through the autotransformer. Note also that the two halves of the load current flow in opposite directions in the two halves of the primary.
Didn't scan it either.
That's why the power company does it, and to a much greater degree.Then if you had a device powered at 120 volts it could be as large as 40 amps.instead of 20 amps.
Advantage being you can use #12 instead of #8 conductor to power a 40 amp. 120 volt machine or device.
That's why the power company does it, and to a much greater degree.
Rattus
I don't know if this is your point or not?
But we could use this to our advantage as a trick to use say #12/2 nm romex to feed your
garage with 240 volts with only two wires.
Then if you had a device powered at 120 volts it could be as large as 40 amps.instead of 20 amps.
Advantage being you can use #12 instead of #8 conductor to power a 40 amp. 120 volt machine or device.
And I also have 240 volts with a neutral that we created.
Your single device can be as big as 40 amps.or say 30 amps and also have enough
power for 120 volt lighting and a duplex recpt. also.
This is really a good advantage.
Please excuse me for cluttering your diagram
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But then we might have to drive a ground rod?![]()
This is a way of getting a neutral from a 120 volt circuit,how many would call it a real neutral?
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Yes, there is. It's a single core, so any single winding, when energized at its design voltage, will cause all of the other windings to be energized at their design voltages (losses aside.)I'm having a mental block with this diagram. How is 120v achieved on line two, there is no induction occurring is there? And would line one and line two be 180 degrees apart??