zappedagain
Electrical
- Jul 19, 2005
- 1,074
OH, my three-phase is rusty...
In North America, we typically get 120VAC off one phase, with one side referred to as hot (line) and the other as neutral (reference, typically held close to earth ground by the power provider). A single fuse gets installed on the hot side. If we want 220 VAC, we use two phases, so each 120VAC has a common reference of the earth ground and adds to 207VAC (close enough for horseshoes), and each phase gets fused.
In Europe (or most of the rest of the world), you typically have 240 VAC. Is that set up as a line (hot) and neutral, or as two phases?
And on to my real question. When running off the mains in Europe, do I need to fuse both wires at the power inlet? I have seen IEC320 power entry modules with a single fuse and a double fuse; is this why?
In North America, we typically get 120VAC off one phase, with one side referred to as hot (line) and the other as neutral (reference, typically held close to earth ground by the power provider). A single fuse gets installed on the hot side. If we want 220 VAC, we use two phases, so each 120VAC has a common reference of the earth ground and adds to 207VAC (close enough for horseshoes), and each phase gets fused.
In Europe (or most of the rest of the world), you typically have 240 VAC. Is that set up as a line (hot) and neutral, or as two phases?
And on to my real question. When running off the mains in Europe, do I need to fuse both wires at the power inlet? I have seen IEC320 power entry modules with a single fuse and a double fuse; is this why?