China primarily uses a three-phase voltage system configured in a star (Y) arrangement for its power distribution. The standard voltage levels for three-phase systems in China are typically 380V for the line-to-line voltage and 220V for the line-to-neutral voltage. However, delta configurations are also used in some industrial applications and for specific equipment. Overall, the dominant system for general power distribution is the star (Y) configuration.
In Europe, low-voltage three-phase distribution is by means of a four-wire system (three line conductors and a neutral) supplied from a wye-connected transformer secondary. In North America, low-voltage is supplied from a delta-connected transformer secondary, one phase of which is centre-tapped and earthed (grounded). The single-phase supply to residences is then supplied by that particular phase, giving 240 V line-to-line and 120 V line-to-neutral. You can tell if you have a delta power when the phase voltage is equal to the line voltage and that you have a star power when the phase voltage =root 3(THE LINE VOLTAGE).
There is phase to phase voltage in 3 phase system.AnswerYou don't get voltage 'phase-to-phase'; it's 'line-to-line'!
My first thought is this is probably a corner grounded delta system, but I'm confused by your voltages. If this was a 460v (L-L voltage) ungrounded or corner grounded system, the phase to ground voltage is meaningless, but the phase to phas voltage will be 460v all around the delta. If you have a 460v system and you're only seeing 230v, there's something wrong.
The three phase voltage is 380 the hertz is 50
In a 4160VAC system, the voltage of one leg (phase) is measured as 4160 volts between that leg and the neutral point in a wye configuration, or between that leg and the ground in a delta configuration. However, the phase-to-phase voltage is 4160V, meaning each leg carries the same voltage when measured against the other phases. If you divide the line-to-line voltage by the square root of 3 (approximately 1.732), the phase voltage in a wye system would be about 2400 volts.
normally delta connection wired in 3 phase induction motor. during starting wiring is in Star and after running normal speed changeover to delta .beacause starting time its phase voltage equals less root3 times of line voltage ,line current and phase current equals. in Delta phase voltage and line voltage equals, and phase current equals root3 times line current
A: A DELTA transformer is a 1:1 voltage transfer delta to Y IS 1:2 voltage transfer. That is for 3 phase system, If the phases are not exactly matched or the voltage is not exactly right then on a Y setup there will be circulating current at the common node.
In Europe, low-voltage three-phase distribution is by means of a four-wire system (three line conductors and a neutral) supplied from a wye-connected transformer secondary. In North America, low-voltage is supplied from a delta-connected transformer secondary, one phase of which is centre-tapped and earthed (grounded). The single-phase supply to residences is then supplied by that particular phase, giving 240 V line-to-line and 120 V line-to-neutral. You can tell if you have a delta power when the phase voltage is equal to the line voltage and that you have a star power when the phase voltage =root 3(THE LINE VOLTAGE).
VP = VL / √3 or VL = VP*√3. this will give you the values for a star connected system. If you using delta the VP = VL
There is phase to phase voltage in 3 phase system.AnswerYou don't get voltage 'phase-to-phase'; it's 'line-to-line'!
My first thought is this is probably a corner grounded delta system, but I'm confused by your voltages. If this was a 460v (L-L voltage) ungrounded or corner grounded system, the phase to ground voltage is meaningless, but the phase to phas voltage will be 460v all around the delta. If you have a 460v system and you're only seeing 230v, there's something wrong.
voltage drop is be a problem.
Three-phase voltage in Germany is 400V, single-phase voltage is 230V.
To calculate the three-phase voltage in New Zealand, you typically use the formula for line-to-line voltage (V_L) in a three-phase system, which is V_L = √3 × V_Ph, where V_Ph is the line-to-neutral voltage. In New Zealand, the standard line-to-neutral voltage is 230V, so the line-to-line voltage would be approximately 400V (230V × √3). Ensure that the system's configuration (such as star or delta) is taken into account when performing calculations.
6350.8 volts AC rms. The phase to earth voltage is ( square root(3) ) x lower than the phase-phase voltage on a 3 phase system.
The Voltage produced by the generator will be like 3 sets of your home's voltage (assuming we're looking at an outlet and not the 220V at the brkr box).Each phase (sinusoidal wave) will be separated by 120 degrees, so when the 1st phase starts the 2nd phase will start 1/20th of a second later. The 3rd phase then starts 1/40th of a second later, and the 1st phase starts again 1/60th of a second later which is the beginning of the second set of sin waves. This of course is based on the N. American Frequency of 60 hertz which is 60 cycles (waves) per second.AnswerFor a three-phase, three-wire, system the line voltages will be identical to the phase voltages.For a three-phase, four-wire, system the line voltages will be 1.732 times the value of the phase voltages.
To convert a 440V line voltage to phase voltage in a three-phase system, you divide the line voltage by the square root of 3 (approximately 1.732). This means the phase voltage is calculated as ( V_{phase} = \frac{V_{line}}{\sqrt{3}} ). For 440V line voltage, the phase voltage would be approximately 254V.