โMar-15-2017 09:41 PM
โMar-19-2017 07:26 AM
โMar-18-2017 03:53 PM
myredracer wrote:I stand corrected. You are absolutely correct. No wonder people have trouble with electrical terminology. Home wiring is single phase, yet can have two "phases" created by a transformer that are 180 degrees apart, but it is still considered single phase. 50 amp service delivers 100 amps of potential 120V power in it's two separate legs, but we still call it 50 amp service. And I am sure there are numerous other terms that defy logic. Go means stop and stop means go. Thanks for the clarification.wnjj wrote:
Incorrect. They are 180 degrees out. Only one phase of the 3 available phases on the power lines are used for a residence. The single 240V phase is center tapped for the neutral to provide two 120V circuits that are 180 degrees out from each other. 120 degrees wouldn't cancel the neutral current anyway.
Concur... However there a few CGs out there that have a 120/208 volt system derived from a 3-phase system and have the hot legs 120 degrees apart. Typically it would be 120/208 volts connected in "wye" configuration like in the 1st diagram. While there are other configurations, a wye secondary is normally what you'll find since the center is connected to ground and is similar to a 120/240 volt system except the hot legs being 120 degrees apart. Homeowners and RV-ers are normally connected to a transformer with single phase primary and secondary like in 2nd diagram and the hot legs are indeed 180 degrees apart but it's not referred to as "phases" in the industry.
Some info. is here and here.
A 120/208 volt (single phase) system for RVs in CGs is normally not a problem because all loads are typically 120 volts. If you had a dryer or other appliance with resistive heating elements in it, you only get (208/240)x(208/240) = 75 percent of the normal output. Voltage drop in the system would make that even worse. The same standard RV 50 amp plug & recept. works on both a 120/240 or 120/208 volt system in a CG.
โMar-18-2017 01:54 PM
โMar-18-2017 11:10 AM
wnjj wrote:
Incorrect. They are 180 degrees out. Only one phase of the 3 available phases on the power lines are used for a residence. The single 240V phase is center tapped for the neutral to provide two 120V circuits that are 180 degrees out from each other. 120 degrees wouldn't cancel the neutral current anyway.
โMar-18-2017 09:07 AM
westernrvparkowner wrote:Rick Jay wrote:They will actually be 120 degrees out of phase. Electrical service is actually three phases, but only two are generally used at any one time in residential and light commercial applications such as RV parks.CDP wrote:
...discovered his two 25A circuits were on the same phase...
Ok, so there's TWO problems here: same phase (0V differential between L1 and L2) and 25A circuits. They should be dual 50A circuits.
Would you mind mentioning this campground? Sounds like a good place to stay away from. If true, I'd also recommend making a post on RVParkReviews.com.mx727 wrote:Yes, the 240V/120V service is a single "split" phase service, but if you view L1 and L2 on an oscilloscope with respect to the neutral, they WILL be 180 degrees out of phase.
Both 120v legs are the same phase and the system is better referred to as split phase with two legs.
~Rick
โMar-18-2017 08:21 AM
Rick Jay wrote:They will actually be 120 degrees out of phase. Electrical service is actually three phases, but only two are generally used at any one time in residential and light commercial applications such as RV parks.CDP wrote:
...discovered his two 25A circuits were on the same phase...
Ok, so there's TWO problems here: same phase (0V differential between L1 and L2) and 25A circuits. They should be dual 50A circuits.
Would you mind mentioning this campground? Sounds like a good place to stay away from. If true, I'd also recommend making a post on RVParkReviews.com.mx727 wrote:Yes, the 240V/120V service is a single "split" phase service, but if you view L1 and L2 on an oscilloscope with respect to the neutral, they WILL be 180 degrees out of phase.
Both 120v legs are the same phase and the system is better referred to as split phase with two legs.
~Rick
โMar-18-2017 08:18 AM
CDP wrote:There is no such thing as two 25 amp circuits on a 50 Amp pedestal. If you mean he got a reading of zero volts between the hot circuits on a 50 amp pedestal, then yes, the pedestal is incorrectly wired and out of code. Such wiring could lead to the neutral being overloaded, since the neutral in a 50 RV outlet only carries the difference between the usage in the two legs, so the theoretical limit is 50 amps (50 amps one leg, zero amps 2nd leg). For this to actually happen the two legs must be 120 degrees out of phase. If they are both on the same phase, there is no cancelling effect and the neutral will carry the sum of the usage of both legs. That would mean the neutral could theoretically be carrying 100 amps, which would eventually lead to it failing.
I don't know what the code is for RV site services. A friend of mine ran into this fairly recently after a discussion on electrical services. Just out of curiosity, he checked the service he was plugged into at the time and discovered his two 25A circuits were on the same phase. He had voltage from hot to neutral on both circuits and "0" between the two. Of course you know this must mean they're in phase since any phase difference would show some voltage difference between the two. He didn't look into this any further before they left the next morning, and since it was of no consequence to him at the time anyway. He just thought it odd enough to comment to me during a recent conversation on the same subject.
I don't know how the pedestal in question was wired internally. Nor do I know if others in the same park were like this one. I made an estimate on how it might be wired to get the results of the same phase on both circuits of a 50A service.
Perhaps there have been changes in the code that might allow this, something the park manager did himself without knowing the code, or perhaps an honest error by someone else that should never have been working on a power pedestal. It is only 50A at 120V which really isn't that much for one conductor to the pedestal. I don't know. My friend is a retired Radar Engineer and I trust what he told me to be accurate. He's actually sort of anal that way. He probably took his oscilloscope to the pedestal for a better investigation. lol
โMar-18-2017 07:52 AM
CDP wrote:
...discovered his two 25A circuits were on the same phase...
mx727 wrote:Yes, the 240V/120V service is a single "split" phase service, but if you view L1 and L2 on an oscilloscope with respect to the neutral, they WILL be 180 degrees out of phase.
Both 120v legs are the same phase and the system is better referred to as split phase with two legs.
โMar-17-2017 05:51 PM
โMar-17-2017 02:20 PM
โMar-17-2017 12:25 PM
CDP wrote:
I don't know what the code is for RV site services.
โMar-16-2017 02:54 PM
โMar-16-2017 01:40 PM
CDP wrote:
Gil made some good points. But here is a newer point that may be rather rare yet.
You may not have 240V anyway. In some parks, you may run into a 50amp service that is two, 25amp, protected circuits of the same phase giving you "0" volts between the two.
โMar-16-2017 12:08 PM