If you are referring to me the posts are numbered in the top right hand corner. You don't need to count to find it.Sorry, I must have miscounted the posts and picked the wrong one. If I remember right you made a point about residential supplies being split phase.
I am sure your teacher did not say you could add the voltages at opposite terminals of a transformer, algebraically, vectorially or any other way.Quote:
I was taught that sinusoids of the same frequency add algebraically only when they are in phase,
PRS,
Bill is quite correct. You will need to get a hold of these concepts to progress in electricity.
Yes your teacher was also correct in your quote above.
But
Your teacher was talking about a different situation from Bill or the original poster.
The addition you refer to happens when the voltages are at a single point.
In this case we are talking about the voltage difference between two points.
What Bill is saying is that if two points (not one ) are at the same voltage there is no voltage difference between them.
What your teacher was saying was if two voltage generators are connected to the same point the resultant voltage, at that point, is the algebraic (or vector) sum of the generator voltages.
It is a very long time since we had two phase supplies available in the UK. Local supplies are three phases of 240 volts each, 415 interphase voltage, fed from the area grid at several tens of kilovolts, fed in turn from the national grid at 250kilovolts via three pahse transformers.By the way, how does the power system in the UK differ from that of the US?
Well they had them in the steel plant my dad worked at. But special generators were used to run them. They were on roll mills if I remember rightly. The generators were run with 240 DC motors so the Hz could be controled and all ran in unison.because no 2 phase devices, such as motors, are possible.
Well not in Canada at least, 2 phase comes from a generator wound with only A Phase and B phase in the stator or a 2 phase motor can be run off a regular generator with A B C phases but only uses 2. Split phase refers to single phase motors like those on your furnace blower, they have a run winding a start winding and a starting mechanism or relay but no capacitor. They are low torque. Some water pump motors are split phase. And where did you find the term "split single phase"? The residential single phase system here in Canada is refered to by the old timers as the Edison 3 Wire System.The term "two phase" is misleading. The more universally accepted terms are "split phase," or "split single phase."