> From: Scott Quinn > I have seen some roads where the utility has 2 of the phases plus > neutral going down them, not true 2-phase power, but 2 phases 120/240 > degrees apart with the third phase just not present.
My street has that. The subdivision as a whole has all 3 phases (down the main road through it), but individual streets off of it have only 1 or 2. (The whole subdivision is on poles, so it's easy to see.) On the ones with 2, some houses are connected to one, some to the other. > I guess they figure twice the loads for only one more wire. No, because most homes are only connected to one phase. I think the main reason to do it is that it allows the total load (of the entire subdivision) to be somewhat balanced across all 3 phases. > Can't remember what it was called but I do remember seeing in some book > somewhere about a "phantom 3rd leg" or something My house has something like that; the previous owner wanted '3-phase service' for machine tools (I think - could have been a compressor, or something) in his basement workshop, so they sold him a pseudo-3-phase service. I forget the exact details of how it works, but the 3rd phase is at 170V to neutral, or something like that. (So I can't power any 110V outlets off the third phase.) I think the way it works is that the two 'main' phases are 220V to each other, 110V to neutral (I think from the usual center-tapped transformer off one of the three main feed phases, i.e. 180 degrees to each other). The third 'pase' is generated by a second, smaller transformer connected to the other feed phase in some arcane way I forget the details of. So it's 120 degrees away from the other two. Noel