By this process all errors to be removed and electricity distribution becomes storng. Rectifier always react all abstraction which law given be Ohms.
Yes. With SOME, you may need a motor-generator set, or an inverter, to convert the single-phase power to three-phase power.... Some more modern 3-phase welders will operate directly on single-phase, because they're inverter-type units already. Many 'classic' transformer-based industrial welders can be made to operate easily off single phase power, at full output using the "Haas-Kamp Conversion". Do a web-search for Haas-Kamp and your welder's brand and model- if it's a popular welder, someone has probably already done it.
single phase, double phase & three phase
There is no such thing as a two phase instrument. There is only single phase and three phase. You can only have: single phase/ one pole single phase/ two pole three phase/ three pole
Yes, there is a difference between single phase and three phase circuits.
Count pulse
Most full size residential dryers and the majority of consumer-level welders run off of 220 volt single phase, residential type voltage. Only, with welders, you may need a higher amperage, dedicated circuit and breaker installed by an electrician, to properly operate it.
Three phase is ac
You don't. A three phase motor will not start unless it is connected to a three phase supply.
R. Romero-Palanco has written: 'Simulation of current fluctuations produced by single-phase arc welders'
To use a single/one phase motor instead of a three phase motor is possible if you have a three phase power supply as you will only need to tap one of the three phases together with neutral and an earthwire, however to use a three phase motor instead of a single phase will require the provision of three phase power supply.
In three phase: I = (three phase VA) / (sqrt(3) x (phase to phase voltage)) for single phase: I = (single phase VA) / ((phase to neutral voltage)) keep in mine three phase VA = 3 x (single phase VA), and phase to phase voltage = 1.732 x (phase to neutral voltage) Therefore the single phase and three phase currents are the same (ie, the three phase currents are the same in all three phases, or balanced). But don't get available current and available power confused (KVA is not the same as KW).