RickyInman
Member
Someone near me has a used Kobalt 30 gallon air compressor for $150. It is 240v or 120v. I have a basic knowledge of electricity. What is the advantage of wiring the compressor 240v as opposed to 120v?
I believe it will actually use less electricity, thus be cheaper to run on 240.
Not so. At the lower voltage it draws twice the current. The wattage is the same in either case. There is no free lunch.I believe it will actually use less electricity, thus be cheaper to run on 240.
The wiring on the 120 circuit is probably not heavy enough to suppy twice the current with the same minimal drop he sees on 240.dual voltage motors have two sets of windings - the windings are in parallel on 120V, and in series on 240V. either way, the windings only see 120V.
if you dual voltage motor works better on 240V than 120V, you're starving it for current, and that's why it doesn't work as well.
" If you double the current by going from 240V to 120V, you have four times the heat" -
NOT true - see post#11; the windings themselves will see the SAME current (AND voltage) in either configuration. The only place that would see twice the current on 120 volt is the wires TO the motor... Steve
The heat in your motor is proportional to I^2*R. If you double the current by going from 240V to 120V, you have four times the heat. Always run at the highest available voltage.
It also might save some insignificant amount of electricity in terms of lower line loses.