No!
The concept of three phase alternating electricity refers to the relational phase differential of three alternating current single phase sine waves, each displaced 120 degrees of phase angle from the other.
<><><><><><><>
Addetion:
still the is a three wire DC transmission system.
usually DC transmission used for several resone but the most know one is when the transmission line is longer than 600 km
No. By definition, polyphase systems e.g. 3-phase are AC, since it is the phase of the alternations that is referred to.
AnswerNo, but interestingly, there are such things a 'three-phase' d.c. motors, which are used (for example) to drive swimming pool filter pumps from solar panels! These machines use a sequence of three d.c. voltages (controlled by the Hall effect) which energise three pairs of field windings in order to create a rotating magnetic field to drive the rotor.
No, there is no configuration that will give you three phase 115 volts.
No. DC does not have phase. In order to have phase, you have to have AC so that you can have two or more AC sources to measure the relative phase angles that they possess.
AC!
The voltage you are referring to is a 'line-to-line' voltage ('line voltage'), as there is no such thing as a 'phase-to-phase' voltage.480 volts. In real life, the voltage will vary slightly by up to 3% (14 V) on a properly sized circuit. Line to neutral will measure 277 volts, plus or minus 3%.
Floating neutral in 3 phase supply is undesirable as if the same thing occurs then there will be bad effect for all single phase equipment which we are using as phase to neutral voltage will exceed from its normal value and it will harm the equipments.
115 is the RMS voltage. The actual voltage is a sine wave from -167 to +167 relative to ground. RMS stands for root-mean-square, and it a way of saying that 155 Volts of DC would do the same work on the same sized load. There can be up to 3 phases, and they are the sine wave, shifted by a part of the curve. In most houses, there are 2 phases, and the voltage to ground for each is 110 to 120 V RMS. The voltage between the 2 is 230-240VRMS. 3 phase gets very complex. Each phase is 115 to ground or neutral. 3 PHASE 115V AC EACH PHASE IS 120 DEGRES PHASE SHIFTED THE EFFECTIVE VALUE IS .639 X 115 THE PEAK VALUE OF PHASE IS 1.41X RMS VALUE.
The formula to use is, phase voltage /1.73 = phase to neutral (ground) voltage.CommentThere is no such thing as a 'phase to phase', or 'phase to neutral' voltage. The correct terms are 'line to line' and 'line to neutral'. So the above answer should read: line voltage/1.73= line to neutral voltage = phase voltage.
3 phase /sqrt(3) * 30 degree phase shift = single phase.
Maximum load current on a 140KVA, three phase transformer when the output voltage is 115 v phase to phase is: 140kva / sqrt (3) / 115 = 703 Amps. frequency does not matter here.
Yes, but you would not want to. 575V is simply 115V run through a 1:5 transformer. (5x 115) 115V @ 20A AC = 575V @ 4A AC Usually the devices (welders) on the 575V side are running 10 or 15A, so: 575A @ 15A AC = 120V @ 75A (A 75A breaker for home use isn't common) 575 volts is a 3 phase voltage. The actual 3 phase voltage is 600/347 to ground. If you have a device that requires 600 volts check to see if it is single phase or three phase. For 3 phase 600/347 you will need a separate service.
I think you will find (in the US at least), that almost all utilities will refuse to provide 3-phase power to a residence. If you have just one thing such as a motor that you need three-phase to run, you can purchase a phase convertor to convert your single-phase to 3.
There is no such thing as 3 phase to a DC motor. DC is direct current and is totally different from AC. 3 phase only exists in AC or Alternating Current
Yes, if the motor is rated 240 volts 3 phase.There is such a thing as 240 volt 3 phase power.However if you are asking if you can use 240 volts single phase on a three phase motor, then the answer is no.
The whole thing once you apply electricity.
The voltage you are referring to is a 'line-to-line' voltage ('line voltage'), as there is no such thing as a 'phase-to-phase' voltage.480 volts. In real life, the voltage will vary slightly by up to 3% (14 V) on a properly sized circuit. Line to neutral will measure 277 volts, plus or minus 3%.
what is 3 phase eletical conction digram of 3 phase motor
Yes. 230V line to line is considered single phase power. The 115v half part of that is called split phase. It should not be called two phase, as it is one phase that has been center tapped and grounded at the neutral point - it is still one phase power.Answer230 V is the standard nominal voltage for residences in Europe. 230 V is the line-to-neutral voltage (phase voltage). Low-voltage distribution is by three-phase, four-wire, system with a nominal line voltage of 400 V and a nominal phase voltage of 230 V.
Floating neutral in 3 phase supply is undesirable as if the same thing occurs then there will be bad effect for all single phase equipment which we are using as phase to neutral voltage will exceed from its normal value and it will harm the equipments.
3 Phase system is for industrial use and 1 phase is for house hold application
By having a transformer with 3 phase input and single phase out put