Well, it finally became clear to me on the way home. I'm still sure
that there's no phase difference in a 240 volt circuit, but "unloading
the neutral" works. The potentials rise and fall at the same time
across the entire circuit, so you can look at it at any point in time as
two interconnected DC loops. The current from the two 120 circuits is
in opposition in the neutral conductor, so the actual current in the
neutral is the difference between the two. If one circuit is drawing 15
amps and the other 10 amps, then you have 15 amps trying to go one way
and 10 amps trying to go the other - the net is 5 amps on the neutral
conductor.
I've heard the "out of phase" myth for a long time and I think it's
propagated in part due to the term "phase" being applied to the end taps
of single phase transformers even though there's only one waveform
present. I've never had a better explanation until now - Thanks Travis.
Patrick
>
> Travis,
>
> Maybe we're just bashing semantics here, but you're confusing "phase" with
> "potential". There is only one waveform present, therefore it's impossible
> for the taps to be "out of phase". As for "unloading the neutral" that's a
> totally new concept to me - I'll look into it.
>
> Patrick
- --
Patrick Flowers
Mailto
atrick
The GMC Motorhome Page
http://www.gmcmotorhome.com
that there's no phase difference in a 240 volt circuit, but "unloading
the neutral" works. The potentials rise and fall at the same time
across the entire circuit, so you can look at it at any point in time as
two interconnected DC loops. The current from the two 120 circuits is
in opposition in the neutral conductor, so the actual current in the
neutral is the difference between the two. If one circuit is drawing 15
amps and the other 10 amps, then you have 15 amps trying to go one way
and 10 amps trying to go the other - the net is 5 amps on the neutral
conductor.
I've heard the "out of phase" myth for a long time and I think it's
propagated in part due to the term "phase" being applied to the end taps
of single phase transformers even though there's only one waveform
present. I've never had a better explanation until now - Thanks Travis.
Patrick
>
> Travis,
>
> Maybe we're just bashing semantics here, but you're confusing "phase" with
> "potential". There is only one waveform present, therefore it's impossible
> for the taps to be "out of phase". As for "unloading the neutral" that's a
> totally new concept to me - I'll look into it.
>
> Patrick
- --
Patrick Flowers
Mailto
The GMC Motorhome Page
http://www.gmcmotorhome.com