I'd like to add some on this problem of balancing three-phase distribution and distributed generation.
The problem the utility faces in balancing their three-phase primary from a substation is not easy when most of the loads are single phase. I was a sawmill yesterday where they have had problems with overheating three-phase motors on utility power. On standby generator power their motors are fine. And there has been brownouts in the area whenever the sawmill is running. I took three photos showing the voltage on one of their motor panels with zero load on their system:
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The wild leg being at 217V on this particular day is normal. However, a difference of 3V between L1 and L3 to neutral is not. They should be identical, as that is suspect right there to cause a delta-wired three-phase motor to draw excessive amps on one phase. Start the mill up and put the system under load and the voltage on L1 dropped to 109V.
I drove the lines for 30 miles and found the problem. Back in June the utility had put in two 2400V transformers with a ground and there was a three-wire single phase feeder running off into the brush. End up that it goes to a lake where there is a lake home and resort development project and in the process of wiring up that development they managed to overload one phase conductor on the utility primary. Turn on the sawmill at the end of the line and guess what happens?
The utility COULD use some form of single phase distributed generation at that development site to "fix" the problem. But who's going to pay for it, what type of distributed generation should be used, and how much and how to time it for peak load is an issue where there's too many people and private property owners involved to come up with a solution.
The problem the utility faces in balancing their three-phase primary from a substation is not easy when most of the loads are single phase. I was a sawmill yesterday where they have had problems with overheating three-phase motors on utility power. On standby generator power their motors are fine. And there has been brownouts in the area whenever the sawmill is running. I took three photos showing the voltage on one of their motor panels with zero load on their system:
The wild leg being at 217V on this particular day is normal. However, a difference of 3V between L1 and L3 to neutral is not. They should be identical, as that is suspect right there to cause a delta-wired three-phase motor to draw excessive amps on one phase. Start the mill up and put the system under load and the voltage on L1 dropped to 109V.
I drove the lines for 30 miles and found the problem. Back in June the utility had put in two 2400V transformers with a ground and there was a three-wire single phase feeder running off into the brush. End up that it goes to a lake where there is a lake home and resort development project and in the process of wiring up that development they managed to overload one phase conductor on the utility primary. Turn on the sawmill at the end of the line and guess what happens?
The utility COULD use some form of single phase distributed generation at that development site to "fix" the problem. But who's going to pay for it, what type of distributed generation should be used, and how much and how to time it for peak load is an issue where there's too many people and private property owners involved to come up with a solution.
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