The possibility for such arose within my utility over the course of many years . . .
44 kV systems quite some physical distance apart and using dissimilar transformers were first constructed and then expanded over the course of decades, eventually creating circumstances essentially identical to that shown in the plot above.
I would agree completely with wayne440's first statement: "Practically - do not do that," then I would modify wayne440's second statement somewhat, and continue to say "because there will likely be a bright flash, a loud BOOM, and a possibly accompanying shower of molten copper. I would deem it an absolute certainty that immediately after the sound of some hockey player shouting 'Just WHAT THE PUCK did you do?!?!?' would be heard."
The simplest and by far the most common way to transfer loads between two sources 30° apart is break before make, viz., take a short interruption to the loads while transferring from one source to the other.
Another is used where a load has displacement or emergency generation; the latter is placed in service and carries - all? - essential? - load while the supply transformer is unloaded, removed from source "A" potential, placed on source "B", then reloaded using either ATS or synchronizing facilities where permitted by the AHJ.
Another much more complex but very elegant approach that does not involve any customer interruptions is to perform such switching as needed to bring the open point to a facility with both generation and synchronizing capability such that generation can carry the load while it is transferred between sources; can be quite convoluted but is very slick, earning some attaboys and LPSs.
CR
"As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another." [Proverbs 27:17, NIV]