Discuss Purpose of 110V 3 phase? in the Electrical Engineering Chat area at ElectriciansForums.net

Reaction score
1
Hi,

I have taken over a design engineering job for industry.

The design is using a 400V/110V transformer. Usually, the 110V is single phase. However, in this case it is giving 110V 3 phase 32A.

The 110v 3 phase is for use with 4P 110V socket to run a pump.

Being in the UK, I am used to seeing 110V single phase for this application.

Can someone explain why the 3phase option will have been chosen instead?

Any diagrams will be welcomed.

Thank you
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot 2022-10-27 110123.png
    29.3 KB · Views: 27
Is the pump something specialised that's only available 3ph 110v?
Or is it in a Special location where the customer has specc'd 110v 3ph?
 
Is the pump something specialised that's only available 3ph 110v?
Or is it in a Special location where the customer has specc'd 110v 3ph?
Hi, this information is not currently available - awaiting a customer reply. The pump is just a vacuum pump which we normally use single phase for.

I wondered if there were unknown reasons for use of 3 phase instead?
 
is it 110v between phases or 110v from phase to N?

a lot of equipment from Japan runs on (don't hold me to the numbers here) about 200v phase to phase, that gives around 115v phase to N.
not unusual in machine building circles but i don't see a reason for using it to supply a pump unless there is not an alternative available for 400v
 
110V such as power tools on building sites are 110V split-phase...Not single phase
ie, there is only 55V to earth, but 110 between the two.
Thanks. On all manufacturers data and our equipment schedules it is referred to as single phase.


Split phase and single phase (3 wire) I believe are the same.

55v to earth is the usual configuration with centre tapped to earth

However you can have the neutral to earth to have the full 110v to earth instead :) (this is the configuration in my original post)
 
Split phase is not the same as single phase.
split gives you 2 phases 180degrees apart.

single phase obviously has no phase difference angle.
3 phase has 3 x phase voltages 120degrees apart.

your original post is about 110v 3 phase
however you have just mentioned that you are talking about 110v from phase to earth is this 3 phase? If so then it would be about 200v phase to phase.

a drawing or spec sheet would be really useful at this point.
 
Split phase is not the same as single phase.
split gives you 2 phases 180degrees apart.

single phase obviously has no phase difference angle.
3 phase has 3 x phase voltages 120degrees apart.

your original post is about 110v 3 phase
however you have just mentioned that you are talking about 110v from phase to earth is this 3 phase? If so then it would be about 200v phase to phase.

a drawing or spec sheet would be really useful at this point.
Sorry, I made an incorrect statement above.

I am looking to understand 3ph 110v.

However, this thread has made me question my understanding of 110v not 3ph (not sure what to call it at this point).

Why is it that manufacturers refer to 110v as single phase? I have attached examples
 

Attachments

  • Capture.JPG
    35.7 KB · Views: 18
  • motor 1.JPG
    107.5 KB · Views: 18
To summarise my understanding.

The video explains a 400v 3 phase line will give the 230v single phase that we use in homes which i understand. And mentions the 110v single phase is from a 308v 3phase line (used in american homes).

So being in the UK with a 400V 3ph supply (230v single phase)... We add a transformer 400V 3ph/110V 1ph or 3ph, this means that the way we have achieved 110V is just through the step-down windings in the transformer with the secondary side either centre tapped to earth or neutral earthed.

Then we can either connect to one phase or three phase on the secondary side depending on the application?

Apologies for any complications along the way.
 
You can connect any single phase motor of the appropriate voltage to a 3 phase supply, either by connecting it across two of the phases or between one of the phases and neutral (if present).
There is actually no such thing as a single phase motor, since it would not start. Single phase motors use a capacitor to create a different phase and feed that to a second winding to provide a starting torque. After the motor is running the second winding as capacitor are often disconnected.
Single phase motors tend to be less reliable, more expensive and have inferior starting characteristics to three phase ones, so three phase is normally used when available.
 
You can connect any single phase motor of the appropriate voltage to a 3 phase supply, either by connecting it across two of the phases or between one of the phases and neutral (if present).
There is actually no such thing as a single phase motor, since it would not start. Single phase motors use a capacitor to create a different phase and feed that to a second winding to provide a starting torque. After the motor is running the second winding as capacitor are often disconnected.
Single phase motors tend to be less reliable, more expensive and have inferior starting characteristics to three phase ones, so three phase is normally used when available.
ah yes, I recall this. I have only ever learned about 3 phase and so any mention of single phase I feel I don't have much understanding in a practical or theoretical sense. All I learned was how we achieve the standard 230v single ph really.

As for motors, again, only learned the 3 phase theory. Which coincides with your explanation of single phase motor as the rotation will need to be initiated. I imagine it to be similar to requiring a DC supply to a synchronous machine, in the sense of something being needed to start rotation.

Cheers
 
Last edited:
Note the terminology used in that table to describe the sockets: 2P+E or 3P+E, not 1P+N+E, and the requirement for protection to be DP or TP. This suggests that a single-phase supply derived from the 110V 3-phase is delta connected and both wires of the single-phase circuit are lines. This is the standard configuration for reduced low voltage 3-phase, 110V line-line and 63.5V line-neutral or earth, the highest permissible voltage classified as RLV.

As per @brianmoooore there is a definite advantage to using 3-phase for motors of any size, but increasing with the size of motor. If a particularly large pump is needed in this application, a single-phase option might be unavailable, costly or undesirable technically.
 
Note the terminology used in that table to describe the sockets: 2P+E or 3P+E, not 1P+N+E, and the requirement for protection to be DP or TP. This suggests that a single-phase supply derived from the 110V 3-phase is delta connected and both wires of the single-phase circuit are lines. This is the standard configuration for reduced low voltage 3-phase, 110V line-line and 63.5V line-neutral or earth, the highest permissible voltage classified as RLV.

As per @brianmoooore there is a definite advantage to using 3-phase for motors of any size, but increasing with the size of motor. If a particularly large pump is needed in this application, a single-phase option might be unavailable, costly or undesirable technically.
Ever since post #1, the reference to a 400V/110V transformer was really bugging me, as the 400V (I assume) is phase-to-phase, and 110V, while a familiar number, should in this context surely also be the phase-to-phase voltage, meaning, as you mention, the L to N is 63.5V. I wasn't aware that is a valid value, albeit the highest, for RLV.
Thank you for the contribution - I can now cease my puzzlement!
 

Reply to Purpose of 110V 3 phase? in the Electrical Engineering Chat area at ElectriciansForums.net

Similar Threads

Absolutely losing my brain here guys What I would like to be able to do is power our 3 phase motor on a single phase supply. Thought I had it...
Replies
3
Views
646
Hi Guys, We have a CNC router which uses single phase for the spindle, stepper motors and control box. This is all wired in and working...
Replies
10
Views
1K
When I joined this forum a decade or so back, there was a discussion going on about a welder that was connected with a 3-core cable to L1, L2 and...
Replies
3
Views
2K
So, the actual job is on a farm. I think I'll keep things simple at the moment and just ask about voltage drop. I'll come on to earthing and...
Replies
11
Views
2K
I've a 3 phase storage heater currently wired to the main fuse box in an office I have. The heater has 2 supplies/isolators, 1 for charging at...
Replies
0
Views
845

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc
This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by Untold Media. Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock