"Our standard service comes with a 3.0 kW cap with 10% tolerance: you can 
drain continuously 3.3 kW total from all your AC outlets. You can peak at 4 
kW for a brief amount of time, then the breaker (in the basement) opens and 
you're left looking for a candle or a torch."

My home has 48kW service (200A @ 240V) which was pretty high back in 1977 
when it was upgraded to that level. We do not really need that level now as 
the electric range is a modern high efficiency unit as is the refrigerator 
and chest freezer in the garage and could get by with half that service. 
Now it is not uncommon to see some new "McMansion" homes in my area hitting 
72kW (300A @ 240V) with their multiple central A/C compressors and myriad 
collection of electrical appliances. We only have single phase in my 
residential area though three-phase is very common for businesses. The 
building I worked in at my previous job had three-phase Delta when we moved 
in but was converted to Wye when a large business moved into the building 
and needed that configuration. So they decided to convert the entire 
building over. Didn't affect my office as we only used three phase for the 
rooftop heat/cooling unit and that was taken care of by the electricians.

On Tuesday, March 25, 2025 at 2:40:51 AM UTC-4 Peter Hall wrote:

> Know how it feels, Aussie- 240v 50hz...Flash💥Thump⚡and Thankyou for 
> Modern Fuses👍
>
> From🚨Peter Hall😁 insidiousnixies🦘Utube 
>
> On 22 Mar 2025 12:50 pm, Richard Scales <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> UK mains can give quite a jolt when you touch it inadvertently!
>
>  - Richard
>
>
> On Saturday, 22 March 2025 at 00:36:58 UTC Adrian Godwin wrote:
>
> We do have a variation for professional outdoor equipment - a building 
> site will have so-called 'site transformers' ranging from 500W portable 
> units to multi-output multi-kW units that take the 240V in and produce 110V 
> with  a centre-tapped earth, much like your 220V system. This gives 110V 
> for site tools in which there's no more than 55VAC from earth. They're not 
> really used outside the building trade, though.
>
> On Fri, Mar 21, 2025 at 11:51 PM David Pye <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Not just the UK - the whole EU is like that!
>
> David 
>
> On Fri, 21 Mar 2025, 23:40 gregebert, <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Wow! I had no idea the full 220V was present in the UK; that's a very 
> dangerous voltage to touch. In the US, neutral is connected to GND at the 
> point-of-entry to the building and there is also a grounding rod though the 
> electrical code only requires a maximum of 25 ohms to Earth (it varies due 
> to soil condition), and definitely wont suffice as a redundant neutral.
>
> On Friday, March 21, 2025 at 5:58:40 PM UTC+7 Adrian Godwin wrote:
>
> GFCI is mandatory on new installations in the UK, typically 20mA. However 
> there are a lot of older installations without them.
> However note that the 230V is not served centre-tapped about earth like US 
> range power : We have a 230V 'live' terminal and neutral is earthed at the 
> substation so may be a few volts above earth at the house due to voltage 
> drops in distribution.  So it's nominally 230V above earth too, there is no 
> possibility of getting 110V without a transformer.
>
>
> On Fri, Mar 21, 2025 at 9:55 AM Rik Declercq <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> GFCI is mandatory in Belgium on +all+ outlets, they're placed in the 
> switchboard, right after the main manual switch, before all other fuses. 
> There's even 2, actually, one that triggers @ 0.03A (for surviving bathroom 
> and washing machines.... 'wet' accidents) and one @ 0.3 A for everything 
> else. Those are placed in series, so often trigger both if you do something 
> very stupid. 
>
>
>
> On Fri, Mar 21, 2025 at 8:20 AM gregebert <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> For those who live with 220V mains, I'm curious if anyone has used 
> 110VAC-to-GND for their projects. I'm sure it violates electrical codes, 
> and there are plenty of reasons why doing that is unsafe, but I wouldn't be 
> surprised if it's been tried by folks here.
>
> GFCI (ground fault circuit interruptors) are commonly used here in the US 
> for some outlets inside homes, usually in areas like kitchens or bathrooms 
> where water is running, and also outdoors. So, exploiting the GND prong 
> would cause a GFCI to trip; it's also redundant because all outlets have a 
> neutral conductor anyways, so using the GND accomplishes nothing. In other 
> words, we can't get 60VAC using GND (yeah, if we *did*, then I probably 
> would have used it).
>
>
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