gobblerhuntr
Electrical
- Mar 16, 2005
- 39
Our city is building 4 soccer fields and putting four poles per field with 11-1500 watt lights per pole at 480 volts. The fields are shaped in a rectangular fashion with a pavillion in the middle of all fields where the transformer and controls will be located as well as a consession stand. In figuring the amps per pole I was doing
11 x 1500= 16500 watts
16500 watts / 480 / 1.732 = 19.85A
Throw in some ballast amps and get around 22A per pole
We are going to run about 400 feet to the closest pole from the transformer and then about 300 to the next, so I have to carry approx 50A for 400 feet then 25A 300 feet. I am going to stay with a single wire size for the whole run. My question is not the wire size but one of the square root of three calculation. The lights require 480 which will be derived from two wires and we will also carry a ground to the pole, so we will use a triplex cable. The poles come prewired for the lights to actually plug in, I was hoping to have a schematic of this so I could visually see the connection point in hopes it would accept all three legs of the 480 and balance the load at each pole.
Is this considered a three phase load even though we are only going to use two legs per pole? I would think so but we will have to balance the windings on the transformer between all the poles to keep our load even at the pot.
I had a drawing of the fields but it is at the office and I can't get to it right now. Can someone set me straight on the square root of three in this application.
11 x 1500= 16500 watts
16500 watts / 480 / 1.732 = 19.85A
Throw in some ballast amps and get around 22A per pole
We are going to run about 400 feet to the closest pole from the transformer and then about 300 to the next, so I have to carry approx 50A for 400 feet then 25A 300 feet. I am going to stay with a single wire size for the whole run. My question is not the wire size but one of the square root of three calculation. The lights require 480 which will be derived from two wires and we will also carry a ground to the pole, so we will use a triplex cable. The poles come prewired for the lights to actually plug in, I was hoping to have a schematic of this so I could visually see the connection point in hopes it would accept all three legs of the 480 and balance the load at each pole.
Is this considered a three phase load even though we are only going to use two legs per pole? I would think so but we will have to balance the windings on the transformer between all the poles to keep our load even at the pot.
I had a drawing of the fields but it is at the office and I can't get to it right now. Can someone set me straight on the square root of three in this application.