The two 110V buses are 180 degrees out of phase. This is known as 120/240 split phase power, with the center point called neutral and connected to (protective earth) ground back at the distribution panel.
There are no three phase 120 volt systems.
The fact that it's supposed to. Voltage is stated as the difference between the two wires carrying electricity to the load. When they bring power to the house from the utility, you get two wires carrying 110v but they're 180 degrees out of phase. Imagine one carries positive 110v and the other carries negative 110v. If you hook one of these wires plus a neutral (zero volts) to the load, you get 110v--110v over 0v. If you hook both of them to the load, you get positive 110v over negative 110v, or 220v. So...red to white is 110v, black to white is 110v, red to black is 220v.
On a three wire supply system if you connect the two 110V wires together and they are across the phase they will short out and trip the breaker. If the two 110V wires are supplied from across the phase and connected to a motor then the motor will run. If the 110V wires are on the same phase nothing will happen.
I think nutral to 1phase 110v,one phase to other is 220v.am I correct?
If they are in phase and have same amplitude you should be okay. I expect this is not the case given your description so you would likely get a distorted waveform.
An ipod nano is 110 volts. Why, because our regular outlets are 120 volts AC.
For the USA its 240V (120V on each line/phase).
Yes, if you have the appropriate adapter
that would depend on the voltage depends on the area of the world that you live in. every country has different transmission voltages. in India we have single phase transmission voltage of 220V, where as in the USA it is 110V
Depends. Some smaller stuff can usually run on both, in which case it will be printed on them. If it isn't, you can't run a 220v item on 110v.
Yes, you can use 110V from two phases instead of 220V, but it depends on the specific application and equipment requirements. If your device is designed to operate on 220V, using 110V may not provide sufficient power, potentially leading to inadequate performance or damage. Additionally, ensure that the two 110V phases are correctly configured to avoid any electrical issues. Always consult an electrician or refer to the device's specifications before making changes.
You can't. Three phase is a different animal.You'll either need to:drop in 3 phase power (expensive proposition),run a motor that drives a 3 phase generator. (another expensive proposition)FYI, the alternator in your vehicle is 3 phase, then it's converted to DC using a diode plate.