NEC User
Senior Member
- Location
- Marlboro, NJ, USA
I spoke to Square D, the manufacturer we use for transformers, and I requested an transformer that would accept a 208 3-phase primary fed using 3 wires and then have a secondary single phase voltage of 480V using 2 wires.
They told me it is impossible because you can't have a 3 phase input and a single phase output...transformers can't funnel 3 phases into 2 phases. Also, they said I should not install transformers backwards.
I spoke to the Senior Electrician that works for my client and he told me we can use Square D transformer catalog number EE30T3H which is a 30 KVA transformer listed as a 480V delta primary and 208Y/120 secondary. He said we can install it backwards and use a 3-pole breaker so 3 wires from our 120/208 panel would feed the would be primary side of the transformer and then connect only 2 wires on the secondary side to feed to our load.
As a designer that uses a by the book approach using calculations and doesn't have any field experience...I'm confused to the point I barely even know what questions to ask.
Is installing a transformer backwards a common practice even though it isn't desired by the manufacturer?
Any consequences that can occur?
Since the 480V side of the XFMR is delta: Connecting 2 phases gives 480V single phase, and Connecting 3 phases gives 480V 3-phase?
They told me it is impossible because you can't have a 3 phase input and a single phase output...transformers can't funnel 3 phases into 2 phases. Also, they said I should not install transformers backwards.
I spoke to the Senior Electrician that works for my client and he told me we can use Square D transformer catalog number EE30T3H which is a 30 KVA transformer listed as a 480V delta primary and 208Y/120 secondary. He said we can install it backwards and use a 3-pole breaker so 3 wires from our 120/208 panel would feed the would be primary side of the transformer and then connect only 2 wires on the secondary side to feed to our load.
As a designer that uses a by the book approach using calculations and doesn't have any field experience...I'm confused to the point I barely even know what questions to ask.
Is installing a transformer backwards a common practice even though it isn't desired by the manufacturer?
Any consequences that can occur?
Since the 480V side of the XFMR is delta: Connecting 2 phases gives 480V single phase, and Connecting 3 phases gives 480V 3-phase?