Without some review, sidestep NEMA 5-15R receptacles served from 120V-secondary starter CPTs, unless the transformer is sized for existing load plus the full receptacle rating. Some starter manufacturers routinly offer machine-tool transformers in their combination starters with an additional 100VA capacity for a "work light."
A rural research site had a fair quantity of indoor and outdoor electrical gear. Along the way combination size-2 starters were installed for some auxiliary pump motors away from process buildings, and it was later proposed that a heat tape was needed for a short run of above-ground piping. There was adequate capacity in the starter CPTs for the additional ~50-watt 120V load. The heat tapes came with molded 5-15P caps, and so electricians installed out-of-the-way receptacles, which allowed disabling heat tapes for warmer seasons.
At one point later the client facility was turning in trouble tickets for non-operational pumps. The ~2-amp CPT-secondary fuses were claimed to be opening whether the pumps has been started or not, but repeated spot load checks and a couple of 24-hr logger runs showed nothing of interest. The client group was a little miffed at the poor performance, fearing that pipe freezing and dead pumps could cause not only lost production—but worse—a new threat of winning an administratively taboo citation for material release. It was only after another fuse swap and again searching for the cause of open fuses, that when leaving the area, the electrician noticed a carpenter passing him on the small road to one of the pumps. He was indeed building timber access platforms for the client facility, and doing it in ‘spare time,’ so his work on the platforms was somewhat random.
The next nearest receptacle was ~100 feet distant, so understandably the carpenter didn’t want to lay out extension cords for his Skilsaw. The carpenter had found the receptacles at several pumps, and—of course—had recurrently and innocently popped CPT fuses. Other than disliking the additional tasks involved, he thought nothing significant of his electric saw dying after a fraction of a second.