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Delta xfrmr secondary: Line to Neutral Relationship 2

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bbleiler

Electrical
May 18, 2003
6
What is the line to neutral mathematical relationship in a delta connected transformer secondary? As in, why is the "wild leg" voltage 208 volts, when the line to line voltage is 240 volts?
 
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There is no 3ø neutral as such in a delta connected transformer secondary. The "wild leg" voltage to the grounded center tap is (sqrt(3)/2)·240. This can be seen by drawing an equilateral triangle where each side is 240. Calculate or measure the distance from the midpoint of one side to the opposite corner.
 
From vector diagram, the red-leg is the side opposed to 60 o triangles between the voltage phase to ground and the voltage phase-to-phase. Therefore, the high leg can be calculated multiplying the voltage line-to-neutral (120V) times 1.73 (SQRT 3).
If the high-leg is at the mid-tap connection between phase A & B the vector relation could be as follow:

Vred-leg = Vcn = Vbc<60o – Vbn<0o = 1.73|Vbn|<90o
NOTES:
- Single pole breakers should not be connected to the high leg.
- Must be permanently market permanent per NEC 215-8.
- Red-leg is also known as wild leg, odd leg, high leg, and delta mid-tap.

REFERENCES:
- IEEE std 142- 1.5.2
- NEC 1999 and previous version: 210.4(D), 215-8, 230.56, 240.83 (E), 240.85, 250-5 and 384-3(E)). 408.3(E), FPN
- For 2002 NEC version: 200.6, 250.119, and 310.12.
 
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