Sounds like he only knows single phase wiring.
Amazes me but shouldnt, how some electricians dont know the systems theyre working on.
I was working in a com tower shed a few weeks ago up in New Castle, and a set of 120v 5-20r outlets had 208v hot to neutral.

Went and checked main service panel(service is 240/120v Delta)and someone had the breaker for the culprit outlets on the c-phase, DESPITE THERE BEING A BIG RED LABEL ON THE PANEL WHICH SAID THE STINGER IS THE C-PHASE! Now yes the stinger usually is the b-phase....but still, he shouldve checked his work!
I had a neighbour tell me something today. I live in an apartment building and we have three phase power coming into the building. She had a problem with a heater in her suite and her electrician replaced the thermostat.
In the process of testing the thing, he told her that both hots to ground were 120v, but between the hots he only got a reading ov 204v where he was expecting 240v...
I explained that since we are three phase the expected voltage is 208v and not 240v, etc...
I was a little surprised that the electrician didn't think that we'd be three phase power. We have 30 apartments with 100A panels in each suite and an elevator.
Anyway, I'm assuming his reading of 204v was accurate. If so, is that a sign of trouble (down from the expected 208v)?
Cheers.
PoCos usually have a guarantee to deliver power within 5%+/- of nominal voltage so 204v is fine. If u put a monitoring meter u will fid that it will vary depending on the loading on the transformer and incoming primary lines.
This is an interesting post, and I will verify the voltage across the the two wires for the oven in one of my wifes apartment building (20 units). I will post what I find.
So if fed by a single phase, it should equal 240V. if fed buy 3 phase, it should read 208V. is this correct.
Youre in canada so u may have different system voltages than us south of the border. In the US, we have several- 120v/240v split/single phase(3-wire), 240/120v 4-wire 3-phase Delta with a 208v phase to neutral stinger/high leg, 208Y/120v 3-phase 4-wire Wye, 480v Delta 3-phase 3-wire, and 480Y/277v 3-phase 4-wire Wye. In Canada, in addition to what we have Ive heard u guys have 600Y/347v...So yes if you want to know then you will have to check. Never assume when it comes to electricity
Yes all heating elements run very slow. Oven, stove top burners, water heater, electric dryer all with take 25% longer to heat up. Some of the large Professional style home ovens even have an extra element in the oven to wire in with the others if you are on 208 instead of 240. Some wall unit air conditioners had a 208/240 volt switch that basically changed the fan to a faster low speed. . Takes longer to heat up but will cook all right if you give it a good 30-40 minutes to heat.
Tell me about it. We live in a town house with 208Y/120v 3-phase service(only single phase in the units) and my oven takes foorreveerrr to warm up. However, our dryer drys clothes in 45mins.

Go figure...