It splits the input 3 phase 120/208 30A input to separate 120V circuits.
3*30A 120V circuits if you want. Mine used about 3KVA, so it'll actually
(just barely) run off of a single 30A/120V or multiple 15/20A 120V circuits
if you rewire the input a bit.
Patrick Finnegan
On Sat, Jan 1, 2022, 14:11 Bill Gunshannon via cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
wrote:
On 1/1/22 1:53 PM, Grant Taylor via cctalk wrote:
On 1/1/22 11:46 AM, Bill Gunshannon via cctalk
wrote:
Having 240 in your house does not necessarily
mean you have 240
outlets anywhere and not everyone is capable of doing their own house
wiring.
There may even be 240 V outlets but not available when / where needed.
E.g. in use (stove, dryer, water heater) or too far away to be able to
plug the VAX in for testing. Then there's also the chance that the
plugs don't match.
I do 120 V wiring semi-regular. I've done 240 V wiring before. I'm
sure that I'll do it again. But I'm always afraid that failure mode on
the 240 V is going to fail spectacularly. My only saving grace is that
the breaker will almost certainly trip in short order to mitigate my
failure. Thankfully no breaker trips thusfar.
In my current house I have done 240V/50A wiring, 240V/50A Sub Panel,
lots of 240V/30A outlets. None of which I would advise the usual
amateur to do. :-)
Just out of curiosity, how much current is needed for an 11/780?
bill