Star 220 v and delta 400 i star 58 percent only voltage applied delta 400v applied
AnswerThese figures do not represent three-phase, four-wire, system voltages, because if the line voltage were to be 440 V, then the phase voltage would be 254 V; or, if the phase voltage were to be 220 V, then the line voltage would be 381 V.You cannot run a three phase motor on single phase power. You'll burn the motor up within minutes. By the way, I've never seen or heard of a 380 volt motor. Do you mean a 480 volt motor? If so, the only way you can power it is with the correct full voltage and a 3 phase power supply.
To reverse the direction of a three-phase motor, you can swap any two of the three motor leads. This will change the direction of the magnetic field created by the motor and cause it to rotate in the opposite direction. Be sure to follow proper safety precautions and consult the motor's manual before making any changes.
If you mean a dual voltage motor 120/240 then yes these will operate on a 240 volt home distribution system.
according to a mathematical theory the flux produced when an alternating current flows in a single phase winding , this flux is composed of tow equal components which result in tow equal torques , these torques work in opposite direction to each other , hence one causes the rotor to move in a certain direction while the other in the opposite direction . this is the reason why a single phase induction motor instead of its rotor to move in one direction it vibrates. the resultant of these torques is zero. if the motor is caused to move by an external mean say by hand , then the resultant will no longer zero and the motor continue revolving and it speeds up even the external mean is removed, For a single phase induction motor to be a self starting motor some techniques are used like connecting an additional winding called auxiliary winding and a capacitor which in some designs removed automatically when the motor speed come to a certain value while for other designs these elements continue to be connected . Any single phase induction motor is provided by a starting technique so if it vibrates , then this means that the technique is failed
S-phase (synthesis phase) is the part of the cell cycle in which DNA is replicated, occurring between G1 phase and G2 phase.
Only if you want to damage it. "277" Volt 3-phase will usually mean 277 from each phase to neutral, and 480 from phase to phase. By "230 3-phase", you likely mean 120 phase-to-neutral, and 208 phase-to-phase. If you really mean 230, then you are probably NOT talking about a three phase motor.
A 'grounded-wye' connection describes a wye-connected supply, whose star-point (or common point) is grounded. This is essential in order to ensure stable phase voltages. I'm not sure what you mean by a 'grounded-phase' connection; if you mean a 'grounded-line' connection, then this is a short-circuit to ground from a line conductor.
Motor is running as a single phase motor with lower speed and creating noise. In this situation it will drawing higher current. If it runs for long time then insulation may get damage and ultimately burnout the winding.CommentThis is where the correct terminology is important. Do you mean 'phase' or do you mean 'line'? If you mean 'phase', then you mean that one of the field windings has failed; if you mean 'line', then you mean one of the supply conductors has failed.If you lose a phase, then the machine behaves like an open-delta or open-wye (depending on its configuration); if you lose a line, then you have two field windings in series with each other, in parallel with the third. Two completely-different situations.
It really depends on what you mean by 'simple'. Motors don't come much simpler than a three-phase induction motor, whose field windings provide an automatically-rotating magnetic field and whose rotor doesn't require any connection to an external supply.
You cannot run a three phase motor on single phase power. You'll burn the motor up within minutes. By the way, I've never seen or heard of a 380 volt motor. Do you mean a 480 volt motor? If so, the only way you can power it is with the correct full voltage and a 3 phase power supply.
It depends on what you mean by 'converter'; I'm not aware of such a machine. <<>> No, a 4 kW rotophase will not handle the start up current of a 4 kW 3 phase motor.
If the proper motor protection is in place, the motor's contactor will drop out and take the motor off line. If no motor protection is in place the motor will single phase. This will put a higher than normal operating current on the other two legs of the motor's windings.AnswerIf you actually mean 'lose a phase', then you've lost one of the three stator windings (which has become disconnected or burnt out). The machine will behave like an 'open wye' or 'open delta' transformer, and you will still have a rotating magnetic field. If, on the other hand, you mean that you've lost a 'line', then you simply lost one of the three supply conductors and you you will end up with two phase windings in series with each other and in parallel across the third, giving you a single-phase situation with no rotating field but you will have a pulsating field instead. The rotor will continue to run if already running, but will not start.It's important to use the correct terminology with three phase, and not to mix up the terms 'phase' and 'line'.
To reverse the direction of a three-phase motor, you can swap any two of the three motor leads. This will change the direction of the magnetic field created by the motor and cause it to rotate in the opposite direction. Be sure to follow proper safety precautions and consult the motor's manual before making any changes.
A star-delta ladder refers to a type of electrical circuit configuration used to start and operate three-phase induction motors. In this configuration, the motor initially operates in a star (Y) connection to reduce the voltage and current during startup, minimizing inrush current and mechanical stress. After a brief period, the motor switches to a delta (Δ) connection for normal operation, allowing it to run at full power. This method improves efficiency and prolongs the motor's lifespan.
On a three phase motor, the phases give you direction for how to hook the motor up to make it spin one direction vs. the other. If you hook up such a motor blindly with all three phases, it may spin in the opposite direction you want; to fix, you swap any two of the three phase connections.
do you mean a 7.5 amp 240 volt....there is no such thing as a 7.5 signal phase motor that i have ever heard of...but this may help if you can't locate the plate on the side of the motor for the wiring diagram, look on the inside of the (junction box)
If you mean a dual voltage motor 120/240 then yes these will operate on a 240 volt home distribution system.