
How many of you guys have a 3 phase service? How much are you paying over what a single phase service would cost ? I'm planning a 40X64 and don't want to short myself on the juice.
In my part of the world, no company will even bring 3 ph to a residence.
Believe it or not there is 3ph in the alley behind my house. It runs at 4160 volts (plus or minus) so not useful to me.
In my part of the world, no company will even bring 3 ph to a residence.
Believe it or not there is 3ph in the alley behind my house. It runs at 4160 volts (plus or minus) so not useful to me.
It is part of the code.
In town on a residential lot there is no way to get Fortis to bring me 3phase. If I lived outside of town I could build a shop on the opposite side of my property and they would drop 3phase 480v or 600v as long as I was willing to pay for it. Kind of dumb.
The OP likely doesn't even know if he needs this, he is just worried about more juice. Not one word about what a guy might likely to be doing in the place.
No home shop will tap a 400/3 to the max. They wouldn't a 200 and they wouldn't 100. Lets do a hp calc to see what size motor could be put on 400, in excess of 100 hp maybe. How many watts and what would the bill be per hr?
where did the OP go?
lots of questions, little feedback......
Where are you at?
I bet if you ask for a bid they give you a quote. Never heard of an electricity supplier turning down a paying work order from a customer. Unless the local Gov has an ordinance against it which I doubt.
How much of this 400 you figure you used in this "retired to play" with car stuff you figure you used? Obviously money wasn't a primary concern here if we are retired and buying new machines and worried about warranty.
This kind of makes my point, 1 partial question and everyone is piling on, next thing this guy will think this is something he must have and it could involve great expense to something he wouldn't even use.
I think Klassen is right.
It's not that three phaes is disallowed in homes, but that supply voltage greater than 120 to ground is not allowed in a SFR.
I think this is covered in 210.
I brought 3 Phase onto my property when we built the house in 2008-09. I called my local electric which happens to be Excel and they came out and gave me a time and material not to exceed bid. Now I am not going to tell you it is cheap or sell you on the fact that the cost per KWH is $0.01 less than my home electrical cost.
But I wanted 3 Phase and was willing to pay for it. Why...well my long term plan is to retire and play in my shop and have every piece of equipment I dreamed of while I couldn't afford squat while restoring and building cars back in the day. I am at that point now and just installed a Sharp VMC with a Fanuc Control on it. Brand new unit. If I had a phase converter there is no warranty.
Now my Bridgeport, Lablond Lathe and Press Brake can all run off a phase converter but it is not reliable power for a servo drives equipment with high end drivers.
So I opted for a 400 amp 3 Phase service.
Additional costs: Step down transformer, 480 Panel(s), Disconnects and a few other things. The meter cost is the same per month but a minor savings on the KWH price.
Now where you can save serious money is the gauge of wire is half for the 480. So if you have long runs with the price of copper you can save little chunks here and there. But you'll spend it on the disconnects and cord caps.
All that said I would do it all over again. I brought the power up the street from a 1/2 mile away. The power company ended up charging me 77.3% of the original bid. I had to pay 100% upfront so I got a nice check back when they were done.
Now the city, for a lack of better words they were pissed off but there wasn't anything they could do about it. The deal was between me and Excel and they had zero say.
So I own the 5 poles, the three additional wires and a giant transformer on the ground and 3 in the air. At least that is what I tell myself...LOL...
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I think Klassen is right.
It's not that three phaes is disallowed in homes, but that supply voltage greater than 120 to ground is not allowed in a residential setting.
So you are allowed 208/120, but not 240 three phase. But the power distribution in the street doesn't readily allow 208/120 drops to houses, they won't do it.
I think part of this is covered in 210., and the rest is economics.
not entirely true.
On 120/240v delta, voltage to ground is 120v on 2 out of 3 legs. The third leg is the high leg or stinger and is 208v to neutral/ground.
Also, out here homes that share the same transformer that businesses use are fed 120v/208v single phase...
I assume the pad mount trany is for single phase 120/240 service. How large is it?
Do u have to pay demand charges and time of use rates?
I would have considered a Phase Perfect too, have not used one personally but have never heard anything bad about them. Kudos to 4 FN 27 for getting what he wants out of life, even if it doesn't make sense to others, live and let live. If 3 phase was easy where I live I'd have it too. By the time you buy single phase new, convert 3 phase to single phase, or buy into converters, sometimes its just nice to get a bill from the power company who provides reliable power for a low monthly cost. I am wondering if Xcel takes care of you better because you have 3 phase. They are a pretty good company, I work with them daily and the general perception I get is that they really do try to take care of their customers.