OOPS, The picture that shows the secondary winding has a major mistake in it. The left and right half are wound in opposite directions. that gives two 120 volt outputs which are fine for 120 volt loads, but the combined output is not 240 volts, it is zero. look at the direction the wire is going around the core, it should be the same on both sides. Need to fix the picture.
It could be either. It's just potential difference between the two. In some cases one pole goes to a different transformer. Depends on the configuration.
Today we lost power only on two of our breakers and our lineman simply replaced all the connection cables on the transformer and we're all good now. How do we only lose partial power?
@Scorpioma....Your House in Electrically divided in 2. The Electrical Wire coming from the Pole to your House, has 2 Black Wires and 1 Silver(Uncovered) Wire. The Black wires each power 1/2 of your House. So when 1 connection goes bad, you only loose power to 1/2 your house. As Lineman, we will replace both connections anyway as SOB. I hope this helps you.
Dreamt a electric transformer on the ground and it went straight up in one second. It makes me wonder what kind of power, knowledge do they have to make small objects and big objects to take off that fast.
You probably mean "technology". It's cheap and it works well. That means it's efficient. What was meant as a slight, apparently turned into a point opposite of the one you were making.
OOPS, The picture that shows the secondary winding has a major mistake in it. The left and right half are wound in opposite directions. that gives two 120 volt outputs which are fine for 120 volt loads, but the combined output is not 240 volts, it is zero. look at the direction the wire is going around the core, it should be the same on both sides. Need to fix the picture.
I agree with you yhnbgt365.
@@BYENZER stop harassment me kids.
@@BYENZER I also agree with yhnbgt365.
Michael Marr Well which is it? Still confused. Must have final explanation.
Both sides wired in same or opposite direction. or not? thank you
Which is correct. Still confused. Both halves wired same direction or opposite.
what 2 wires lead to the primary coil? 2 phases out of the 3 phases or one phase and a return path?
It could be either. It's just potential difference between the two. In some cases one pole goes to a different transformer. Depends on the configuration.
Today we lost power only on two of our breakers and our lineman simply replaced all the connection cables on the transformer and we're all good now. How do we only lose partial power?
@Scorpioma....Your House in Electrically divided in 2. The Electrical Wire coming from the Pole to your House, has 2 Black Wires and 1 Silver(Uncovered) Wire. The Black wires each power 1/2 of your House. So when 1 connection goes bad, you only loose power to 1/2 your house. As Lineman, we will replace both connections anyway as SOB. I hope this helps you.
@@garynelson9538 Thanks, I did end up reading something like that, so it's essentially one for left and one for right side of my breaker?
@@garynelson9538As SOP.
Secondary winding drawing inside can is incorrect.
No sir. It's how we get opposite polarity on the two hots. Otherwise there wouldn't be +/- opposing sine waves between the two hots.
Good video, usefull...
Dreamt a electric transformer on the ground and it went straight up in one second. It makes me wonder what kind of power, knowledge do they have to make small objects and big objects to take off that fast.
What is AMOT means in transformer?
That video are wrong. 230V will not work with winding like that.
Correct. The output voltage would be 120 from center lug to either outside lug and voltage across outside lugs would be zero.
I like paw patrol cap
सर plz हिंदी मैं बनाय
Hindi m banaye sir
What a cheap US technic
You probably mean "technology". It's cheap and it works well. That means it's efficient. What was meant as a slight, apparently turned into a point opposite of the one you were making.