Yes
If the motor is operated from a three phase three wire distribution system the motor will not need a neutral wire.
The neutral wire is the return wire back to the distribution panel from the load. Without this return wire no load will work.
Pomengranate grws in neutral soil along with celery
The neutral provides a path back to the source for the electricity. In a three-phase circuit, it is mainly used to carry the unbalanced load back to the source. In theory, a perfectly-balanced three-phase circuit would not need a neutral, but this is almost impossible to achieve in actual practice.
we dont need a neutral because we had a 2 hot leads
Check the internet for a voltage drop calculator.
It depends on:what you are calling a dedicated circuitWhether there is ANY possibility that the neutral could be required to carry a load in excess of the rating of the wire.First we have to make certain that we're talking the same language, second we have to consider the fire hazard involved. (although, if we're looking at safety, we would need to reverse the two)The simple answer is No.The term "dedicated circuit" is not defined in the code. But in practice the term refers to a circuit that is run for a particular purpose, often to one piece of equipment or receptacle (outlet). Sharing a neutral contradicts the principle of a dedicated circuit.Sharing a neutral would expose the circuit to electrical elements such as harmonics. A dedicated circuit is intended to avoid such problems.
No
To complete the circuit. The word neutral is a convention it does not mean it has no purpose
Usually with a voltage of 600 volts the motor will be three phase. To use a transformer with that motor you will need a three phase 240 volt service. These days utility companies are moving away from three phase 240 and substituting it with 120/208. The 208 three phase service has the added bonus that 120 volts can be obtained from the star point (grounded neutral).
If the motor is operated from a three phase three wire distribution system the motor will not need a neutral wire.
This answer is specific to the US and other regions that use 120/240 split phase power. This is generally not recommended because it would cause the poles of the circuit breaker to be unbalanced. You will need to have access to one of the hot leads, a neutral lead, and an earth ground lead. Dedicated 240V circuits generally do not have a neutral wire, because they only need both hot leads and the earth ground.
all games need a dedicated to make real
I need to have my fridge fixed. Are there any companies specifically dedicated to appliance repair?
Not usually, if the three phase pump is a three wire pump then the disconnect does not need a neutral. The pump control may or may not need a neutral depending on the voltage system that the control panel needs.
Acid solution is not neutral, neutral is PH=7, so you need to add base until PH=7
cuse its need to devicate in demonitrate