furnaces in industries...
In a two-phase connection, the phases are displaced by 90 degrees. Two lines (not 'phases') of a three-phase system will provide a single-phase supply, not a two-phase supply.
Two scenarios are that the motor could be a three phase motor. These three phase motors are manufactured in smaller sizes. The other scenario is that the motor is a 208/220 volt single phase motor. It will operate on 208 volts by taking two legs of the three phase supply for its operation.
Three phase uses a safety circuit away from the machine, two phases uses you as the safety circuit
It's unlikely you have a two-phase supply. Two-phase systems (two phases, displaced by 90 electrical degrees) are very old, and there are very few two-phase systems around. Assuming you really mean 'two phase', t's unlikely, therefore, that you can use a three-phase energy meter using its standard terminals.
If you are asking whether it is possible to upgrade from single phase to two phase, then you should understand that a two phase system is archaic and will not be available from your electricity supply company. If you are asking whether your company can supply two lines (out of three) it's quite unlikely -they will normally supply single phase or three phase! You can likely upgrade to three-phase if you have a reason to do so -e.g. to operate three-phase motors. As for the cost -you'll have to check that our yourself!
In a two-phase connection, the phases are displaced by 90 degrees. Two lines (not 'phases') of a three-phase system will provide a single-phase supply, not a two-phase supply.
Two scenarios are that the motor could be a three phase motor. These three phase motors are manufactured in smaller sizes. The other scenario is that the motor is a 208/220 volt single phase motor. It will operate on 208 volts by taking two legs of the three phase supply for its operation.
Your question is rather confusing, as you do not specify what you mean by 'panels'. Your reference to a 'two-phase' supply is also confusing because two-phase supplies are an archaic precursor to 'three-phase' supplies, and it's unlikely you'll come across any two-phase supplies anywhere these days!
Not necessarily. Two single-phase supplies could be supplying the same phase, which means you don't get the same range of voltage options you get with a true two-phase supply.
Three phase uses a safety circuit away from the machine, two phases uses you as the safety circuit
It's unlikely you have a two-phase supply. Two-phase systems (two phases, displaced by 90 electrical degrees) are very old, and there are very few two-phase systems around. Assuming you really mean 'two phase', t's unlikely, therefore, that you can use a three-phase energy meter using its standard terminals.
If you are asking whether it is possible to upgrade from single phase to two phase, then you should understand that a two phase system is archaic and will not be available from your electricity supply company. If you are asking whether your company can supply two lines (out of three) it's quite unlikely -they will normally supply single phase or three phase! You can likely upgrade to three-phase if you have a reason to do so -e.g. to operate three-phase motors. As for the cost -you'll have to check that our yourself!
Yes
i don know
Single-phase means you have a simple AC supply on two wires, usually a live and neutral, as supplied to the average house throughout the world. Single-phase also includes a split-phase system where you have for example a 240 v supply with a centre-tap neutral giving two separate 120 v supplies. The alternative is three-phase, which can be on three wires or it can include a 4th neutral wire. It is used for transmission of power in bulk because it uses wire efficiently over long distances.
A single-phase supply is obtained between any two line conductors or between a line and neutral conductor of a three-phase supply. To obtain a three-phase supply from a single-phase source is far more difficult, and requires additional equipment.
A Scott transformer converts 3-phase to 2-phase and vice versa, so if you get a Scott transformer it can convert a 2-phase supply into 3-phase for the motor. Caution: the 2-phase supply has to be a genuine 2-phase as defined, with 90 degrees phase between the two phases, and these are extremely uncommon. A Scott transformer CANNOT be used with the split-phase supply found in many US homes which have a 240 v single-phase transformer with the centre earthed and connected to a neutral wire to produce two 120 v circuits.