In the Northeastern US, some POCOs get their power generated from Canada.
Where else is it used?
Some of the northern states near the Great Lakes, I'm told. (Been corrected on it before). Also on ships.
In the Northeastern US, some POCOs get their power generated from Canada.
Where else is it used?
415/240 is becoming common in datacenters in the US.Just for info and yes, this is way out in left field but Square D makes a 20 amp single pole breaker rated at 240/416 volts. It's QOXD120. The bolt-on version is QOBXD120. Feel free to laugh, I did, but the AIC (Ampere Interrupting Capacity) is 3K. Not all that useful......lol.
Obviously not meant for the US market but useful in foreign countries where the supply voltage is 240/416.
P.S. These come in 16 and 32 amps too, I always wanted to get a 16 or 32 and put it in a panel that will be inspected by a royal jerk just to see what he would do..........lol
P.P.S. If the high leg system was an open ∆ and the high leg transformer was 25KVA or less and its impedance was 3.5% or more, the maximum available fault current on the high leg would be less than 3KA. Maybe not so useless after all.....
using 277v rated single poles for 240v rated servers?415/240 is becoming common in datacenters in the US.
You can fill out a sub panel with more breakers with this distribution setup. It's all about density.
plenty of good motors rated for 208. anything with a W22 or a hitachi motor on it often has the rating.Last thing you would want to do is run a 230V compressor on 208V. When ordering a new compressor, I-R supplies a single voltage motor when 208V is specified, IMHO, if 3Ø power is available, it's foolish not to use it.
oh boy. corner-grounded delta is a special kind of animal that confuses even experienced sparkies to no end... those are fun to work on too, what with the special provisions for grounding and bonding.... they are getting rarer and rarer as PoCos dont want to deal with them anymore....plenty of good motors rated for 208. anything with a W22 or a hitachi motor on it often has the rating.
or you can program your VFD for AVR and let it magic it out.
service where I work is 240V 1600A corner delta service. tapped hot, too.
And of course the office is 208Y, and there's a separate low voltage transformer & panel for the shop 120V loads. half the machinery is 120V controls (local control transformer).oh boy. corner ground delta is a special kind of animal that confuses even experienced sparkies to no end... those are fun to work on to with special provisions for grounding and bonding.... they are getting rarer and rarer as PoCos dont want to deal with them anymore
Sadly, an architect couldn't have been further removed from any step of "designing" this place.All the more reason to have permanent,engraved labels, on all equipment
Ive been spoiled all these years by following behind architects that actually require that.
oh boy. corner-grounded delta is a special kind of animal that confuses even experienced sparkies to no end... those are fun to work on too, what with the special provisions for grounding and bonding.... they are getting rarer and rarer as PoCos dont want to deal with them anymore....
this is surprising.I've never heard of 240 delta.
At the poco we had 480 ungrounded delta that utilized 240/480 transformers.
We left it ungrounded (straight 480 to the customer) .
The electrician was allowed to ground a corner if needed/ wanted, usually for a reference point.
Yes on special provisions especially if we needed to phase in two separate banks together.
In order to do that we had to establish a ground on one of the phases.
You'd better be dang sure there was no existing ground and if there was you had to know which phase it was.
Yeah the poco's use 277 transformers now when they need to replace a bank. Most all 240/480 transformers are hard to come by except for freeway lighting.
this is surprising.
120/240 3Ø Delta is pretty common where majority of customer loads are single phase and customer just has a few 3Ø loads...
we have several corner grounded 240 Delta services here in town. they do exit... but not very common anymoreNo , I know about 120/240 delta (closed or open) But that is not 240 "corner grounded" delta ,but is grounded (center tapped) to give the customer 120.
If a corner grounded 240 delta existed (and it may somewhere) the customer would not get any 120. In fact they would get 5 readings of 240 volts.
I don't get what the big fuss is about, personally. I don't see it as much different from an appliance on a 10-30 cord, except it's all in metal pipe.oh boy. corner-grounded delta is a special kind of animal that confuses even experienced sparkies to no end... those are fun to work on too, what with the special provisions for grounding and bonding.... they are getting rarer and rarer as PoCos dont want to deal with them anymore....
except a nema 10-30 has no ground terminalI don't get what the big fuss is about, personally. I don't see it as much different from an appliance on a 10-30 cord, except it's all in metal pipe.
yes rarity and ignorance about it are the issues not the system itself.Once you're not at 120V to ground anymore, they're all (extra) dangerous. at this point i think the rarity is the main issue. it's not caused me a single problem.
it's fun watching someone realize that wiring a 3 phase load is almost the same as wiring a single phase load out of the same panel though.
except a nema 10-30 has no ground terminal
yes rarity and ignorance about it are the issues not the system itself.
Thats an open delta bank.
thats correct. its called an OPEN delta. same voltages as a CLOSED delta (3 cans) but only 58% of the capacity of a CLOSED (or full) delta.... watch out for that stinger/hi-leg....
thats correct. its called an OPEN delta. same voltages as a CLOSED delta (3 cans) but only 58% of the capacity of a CLOSED (or full) delta.... watch out for that stinger/hi-leg....
its because you only have 2 cans not 3. so of course the capacity would be less.... youre missing 1 coilCan you expound on the claimed lesser capacity?
Now I can possibly see that if using the same size transformers on open or closed delta that may be true. Due to the fact the ties on the power transformers help with the load on the lighter (center tapped transformer).
On our 12kv system we would almost always build closed deltas. This would utilize all 3 primary phases for balancing the load across the circuit. This was possible to build closed deltas because the primary winding was open (2 bushings pots) and floated(not grounded). Ungrounded wye, grounded delta.
On our 35kv system we could only build open delta because the one end of the primary coil was grounded to the case of the transformer (1 bushing pots) .
In that case due to load requirements by the customer the transformer size increased.
I've never really understood when described that way either.its because you only have 2 cans not 3. so of course the capacity would be less.... youre missing 1 coil
I guess that's why we would up the transformer size then when we built open deltas.its because you only have 2 cans not 3. so of course the capacity would be less.... youre missing 1 coil

