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Yes this can be used and safely, and has been suggested my words multiple small junk loads will help more than not. The CAUTION here is if you get anal and want 240 volts and not the 208 as normal, your 240 loads will work just fine, while your 120 loads will not be a worry for very long, first likely will be the smoke then the pungent smell, and that might not be the exact order, but my humor aside, most items unless of the newer universal voltage type will be melted and that will be it. So that returns us to your original question. If your load is a home with normal demands and a mix of appliances, dont fear for example electric water heaters, heating units or stoves will take a bit longer to reach temp levels, AC loads including hermetic compressors will not suffer. And remember if your load/s is some distance away measure your voltage at the loads or as close not let you voltage be determined at the generator set measurement point, and its here also you can cheat a bit more, seldom is the home really dead nuts see 120/240 most often more like 120-124 and 240-245 or abouts. OK enuff of my blab, get after it and lets hear how it goes..Does running an 804 wired for single phase damage the gen head at all?
So 208/240 items will do just fine? But items that run on 120 will burn up?Yes this can be used and safely, and has been suggested my words multiple small junk loads will help more than not. The CAUTION here is if you get anal and want 240 volts and not the 208 as normal, your 240 loads will work just fine, while your 120 loads will not be a worry for very long, first likely will be the smoke then the pungent smell, and that might not be the exact order, but my humor aside, most items unless of the newer universal voltage type will be melted and that will be it. So that returns us to your original question. If your load is a home with normal demands and a mix of appliances, dont fear for example electric water heaters, heating units or stoves will take a bit longer to reach temp levels, AC loads including hermetic compressors will not suffer. And remember if your load/s is some distance away measure your voltage at the loads or as close not let you voltage be determined at the generator set measurement point, and its here also you can cheat a bit more, seldom is the home really dead nuts see 120/240 most often more like 120-124 and 240-245 or abouts. OK enuff of my blab, get after it and lets hear how it goes..
Best: mac/mc
I recently bought an 803a for my home and I am impressed with it. I live in south FL where hurricanes are just a matter of time. So I wanted to squire one for my business, problem is an 803 is not enough for my business. So I was going to use two 804 in parallel wire for single phase.Why don't you tell us what you are doing, or want to do. Then we can tell you if its possible.
West palm beach!, so TV, computer, won’t like it?Appliances should be fine, they usually arent too picky about 208 vs 240.
What part of fl? Im near O town.
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With the way its wound youll get 120 208 out of it. So all the 120 devices wont know the difference . The big things stove dryer etc will see a lower voltage but they are usually rated to work within that range.West palm beach!, so TV, computer, won’t like it?
Not all residential is 120 240. I have worked in places that send 120 208 to residentsHowdy,
120 is 120
Look over your big electrical items and look at there plates. A well pump will say 208-240. A A/C unit might say 208-250, Not all electrical things out there, but, most of the items which want 240, might have a name plate saying it works with 208.
3 phase has 120v, and 208v, 60 Hz
1 phase is 120v/240v, 60 Hz.
No matter how you slice it, 120, is 120.
The problem comes down to your electrical service panel. Standard US service panel, 200 amps, 120/240. Every circuit breaker is different leg, so a dual pole breaker hits both legs, and whayla, it gets 240v .
If your at this phase and not understanding, maybe get a pro out to help you out. Electricity can kill you.
Larger US commercial locations are 3 phase. So a 3 phase generator would hook right into the service panels.
Commercial locations also require a proper generator attachment for service. Electrician involved.
US standard service is 120/240Not all residential is 120 240. I have worked in places that send 120 208 to residents
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Not always. This is what I do for a living.US standard service is 120/240
No not at all, shud be just fine... I guess my post was hard to follow,.. left in the 208 range ur fine. and ur 240 appliances are fine .. it's when you adjust the output for 240 or abouts that your 120 follows near on a linear response.. do this measure your set 120 voltage at the 208 output answer ? 120 correct next with no loads applied turn up the voltage to say 225 and then measure your 120 .. you will get at or near 130 .. now go all in and read at 240 and your 120 will read ?? 138-139 am I making sense ..So 208/240 items will do just fine? But items that run on 120 will burn up?
Yes this is all correct but only in a SINGLE PHASE setting, once we enter 3 phase the famous Sq root of 3 becomes the JUDGE thanx mac/mcHowdy,
And don't get technical about power.
You can call it 110/220, or 115/230, or 120/240, or 125/250. That is the US standard for service.