โAug-14-2019 06:05 AM
โAug-14-2019 05:37 PM
cougar28 wrote:Yes the neutral carries the difference of the 2 loads for a 50A RV pedestal plug. I took the post to mean both hots are connected to L1 or L2 like the cheater cord allows.RLS7201 wrote:philh wrote:
Two questions,
1. I've heard of some wiring the same 120V phase to both sides. Wouldn't this drive twice as much current through neutral line?
2. Other than the problem of hooking to a single phase circuit, why wouldn't the AC units be 2 phase? Wouldn't that be much more energy efficient?
What is being discussed(?) here is called split phase. The return path on the neutral line carries an inverted sine wave from L1 & L2. When L1 & L2 carry a balanced load, there is no current flow on the neutral path.
Maybe you can follow this.
Richard
RLS7201 is 100% correct. The neutral only carries the unbalanced load between the two line.
โAug-14-2019 05:28 PM
philh wrote:
Two questions,
1. I've heard of some wiring the same 120V phase to both sides. Wouldn't this drive twice as much current through neutral line?
โAug-14-2019 05:27 PM
Dutch_12078 wrote:Good answer.philh wrote:
Two questions,
1. I've heard of some wiring the same 120V phase to both sides. Wouldn't this drive twice as much current through neutral line?
2. Other than the problem of hooking to a single phase circuit, why wouldn't the AC units be 2 phase? Wouldn't that be much more energy efficient?
Yes, if a single 120 volt service is wired to both L1 and L2, the neutral carries the total load from both hot legs. Assuming a standard 50 amp single breaker though, the total load cannot exceed 50 amps.
Standard residential/RV 120/240 volt service is not "2 phase", it's a single "split-phase" service.
โAug-14-2019 05:13 PM
RLS7201 wrote:philh wrote:
Two questions,
1. I've heard of some wiring the same 120V phase to both sides. Wouldn't this drive twice as much current through neutral line?
2. Other than the problem of hooking to a single phase circuit, why wouldn't the AC units be 2 phase? Wouldn't that be much more energy efficient?
What is being discussed(?) here is called split phase. The return path on the neutral line carries an inverted sine wave from L1 & L2. When L1 & L2 carry a balanced load, there is no current flow on the neutral path.
Maybe you can follow this.
Richard
โAug-14-2019 05:05 PM
โAug-14-2019 04:52 PM
philh wrote:
Two questions,
1. I've heard of some wiring the same 120V phase to both sides. Wouldn't this drive twice as much current through neutral line?
2. Other than the problem of hooking to a single phase circuit, why wouldn't the AC units be 2 phase? Wouldn't that be much more energy efficient?
โAug-14-2019 04:50 PM
philh wrote:
Two questions,
1. I've heard of some wiring the same 120V phase to both sides. Wouldn't this drive twice as much current through neutral line?
2. Other than the problem of hooking to a single phase circuit, why wouldn't the AC units be 2 phase? Wouldn't that be much more energy efficient?
โAug-14-2019 04:41 PM
โAug-14-2019 03:16 PM
time2roll wrote:Actually all things electrical generate a lot of confusion on rv.net. IMHO electrical is the most confused and least understood subject of all on rv.net.
Unbelievable amount of confusion on RV.net
โAug-14-2019 02:54 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:Yes exactly the same NEMA 14-50R. Same as you find at the campground, same as you find behind the cabinet to plug in the oven at home. Only one way to wire and connect power to meet code. Very common, nothing special.
A question to the forum respondents...
Is not this receptacle and plug the same as for a stick and brick set up for an electric range that demands 120 vac for stove stuff like lights, fans, clock timers?
โAug-14-2019 02:49 PM
โAug-14-2019 01:14 PM
โAug-14-2019 12:38 PM
12th Man Fan wrote:
Before you have this done make sure the electrician knows what you need. It is not a normal 220V circut it is two 110V.
There have been several posts with pictures on this issue. If you install the wrong one it can cause severe damage to you rig.
โAug-14-2019 08:53 AM
โAug-14-2019 08:53 AM