Nominally 220-240V phase to neutral & 380V phase to phase.

Alan C

On 08-Apr-20 08:47 AM, Paul Sorenson wrote:
Sorry - you misunderstood me.  Our 240V is single phase.  Typical power to the house is 3-wire - two hot wires and a neutral. Voltage across the two hot wires, which are opposite phases is 240V and voltage from each hot to the neutral is 120V.  And yes, 3 phase is pretty much industrial.  How is your 3 phase set up. Here  two of the three wires are 120 V to neutral and the third is a "wild" phase that is 180V to neutral.

-p

On 4/8/2020 1:25 AM, Alan C wrote:
Surprised to hear you still have 3 phase installations. All houses here are single phase 240V. Industrial installations use 3 phase.

Alan C

On 08-Apr-20 08:14 AM, Paul Sorenson wrote:
Actually, the dual voltage (120/240VAC) infrastructure is not too bad to deal with.  Appliances with a high power draw - stove, oven, water heater, well pump, for example - require 240 V, but each has a dedicated circuit. Nearly everything else - lights, receptacles, kitchen appliances are 120V.  You do need to set up your 120V circuits so there is a balanced load with each phase of the 240V providing fairly equal power.

-p

On 4/8/2020 12:48 AM, David Mann wrote:
You can never put too many outlets in a kitchen.  We have a similar arrangement to you for the outlets and it's just enough.  One of the outlets has a USB charger built-in.  We also have the dishwasher on a switch to prevent little fingers from accidentally activating it.

We had our entire switchboard replaced when we installed the kitchen.  Partly because the old one contained asbestos and the kitchen work would have require drilling into it, but also to get the entire house protected with earth-leakage breakers (due again to little fingers).

That dual-voltage system must be a pain in terms of infrastructure.

Cheers,
Dave

On Apr 7, 2020, at 11:33 PM, Godfrey DiGiorgi <[email protected]> wrote:

Hi!

Hmm. Well, we're to code for here. I rebuilt the kitchen in 2016 and everything passed the building inspector afterwards nicely. It failed inspection before I did the job… The building was built in 1973 and had dismal wiring in the condominium units … I've ripped out all the electricals and upgraded everything throughout the condo to modern spec and capabilities.

That wall behind the sink now has three standard 110VAC outlets spaced about 1.3m apart to provide power for countertop appliance use, plus the switching for undercabinet lighting and the garbage disposal unit. They're all-weather sealed outlets inside and all properly grounded. I have two more on the opposite side of the kitchen at each end of the other main work counter, and one in the refrigerator nacelle. Each side of the kitchen is a separate circuit with its own breaker protection. There's also the 240VAC high load circuit for the stovetop, convection/microwave oven, and dishwasher on the sink side. I went all out to provide sufficient, safe circuits and power because before I redid the kitchen there was just one 110VAC and one 240VAC circuit for everything, and only two poorly placed outlets.

A little TMI, I'm sure. I had too much fun designing the kitchen and re-laying-out the electricals for the condo. Never mind all the other projects and upgrades… :D

G
—
"Simplify, simplify, simplify.” ~ Henry David Thoreau
"One 'simplify' would have sufficed." ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson


On Apr 7, 2020, at 12:28 AM, David Mann <[email protected]> wrote:

I think it would be illegal to have electrical sockets that close to a sink here.

Cheers,
Dave

On Apr 7, 2020, at 9:33 AM, Godfrey DiGiorgi <[email protected]> wrote:

I've been putzing about the condo today with the camera.

Dining Table - Santa Clara 2020 :: https://flic.kr/p/2iMGYtD
Red Sofa - Santa Clara 2020 :: https://flic.kr/p/2iMGYv2
Mexican Bear - Santa Clara 2020 :: https://flic.kr/p/2iMCvAE
Kitchen Sink - Santa Clara 2020 :: https://flic.kr/p/2iMGYwj

All made with Hasselblad 907x and the XCD 21mm f/4 lens, ISO 200 @ f/8.

Great art...? LOL! But it's fun and I'm getting to know the camera pretty well now.
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