veritas
Electrical
- Oct 30, 2003
- 467
Hi
I need a small generator for some testing. The supplier said he can give me an 8kVA, 3-phase gen set rated at 230V/400V, 11.5A. The same set can also give me 21.6A, 5kVA singlephase. I am puzzled by this. Where does the 21.6A and 5kVA come from?
According to my calcs, 8kVA translates into 11.5A per phase as the line current assuming the generator is star connected. Power per phase is 8kVA/3 = 2.67kV/phase. Assume the gen is now delta connected. Then the phase current is 2667VA/230V = 11.6A which translates into a line current of 20A. This is the closest I can get to 21.6A.
If 1-phase load is now connected between two phases, I get the power in the load is 230V * 20A = 4.6kVA. Not quite 5kVA. Puzzling indeed!
Can anyone shed more light on this? Is my assumption correct that the generator is changed frm star to delta connected for the 1-phase load? Is it possible for a 3-phase gen to operate as a 1-phase gen without adverse effects?
Thanks.
I need a small generator for some testing. The supplier said he can give me an 8kVA, 3-phase gen set rated at 230V/400V, 11.5A. The same set can also give me 21.6A, 5kVA singlephase. I am puzzled by this. Where does the 21.6A and 5kVA come from?
According to my calcs, 8kVA translates into 11.5A per phase as the line current assuming the generator is star connected. Power per phase is 8kVA/3 = 2.67kV/phase. Assume the gen is now delta connected. Then the phase current is 2667VA/230V = 11.6A which translates into a line current of 20A. This is the closest I can get to 21.6A.
If 1-phase load is now connected between two phases, I get the power in the load is 230V * 20A = 4.6kVA. Not quite 5kVA. Puzzling indeed!
Can anyone shed more light on this? Is my assumption correct that the generator is changed frm star to delta connected for the 1-phase load? Is it possible for a 3-phase gen to operate as a 1-phase gen without adverse effects?
Thanks.