On Wed, 22 May 2013 14:47:46 -0400, "J.B. Wood"
<
john...@nrl.navy.mil> wrote:
> Hello, all. Has anyone ever come across a twist-lock plug that just has
> 3 current-carrying wires L1, L2 and neutral (N) such that L1-N is 120 V,
> L2-N is 120 V and L1-N and L2-N are 120 electrical degrees apart? IOW,
> there is no L3 wire as you would normally(?) expect. Thanks for your
> time and comment. Sincerely,
I lived in a part of New York City that typically had 2 phases in
each house. I don't know how much of NYC is wired that way, but
in Queens the areas known as Floral Park (adjacent to, but not the
same as Floral Park in Nassau County) and Glen Oaks we had a nominal
208V AC.
You had to be careful when buying air conditioners, electric
stoves, electric driers, and some power tools in Nassau County because
you had to make sure that you got stuff wired for 208V, not 240V.
The stuff my family owned used plugs with two phases plus ground.
We didn't have an electric stove or electric drier, but they would
typically need 208V and 120V. I don't know if they had a separate
circuit for clocks and lights or if they used Ground as neutral
or had a separate neutral line. Many houses didn't have grounded
120V outlets and I'd bet that many houses didn't have Ground
for 208V and 240V outlets, no matter what the code was when the
house was built.