On Sun, 19 Feb 2017 13:48:55 -0800 (PST), "
pf...@aol.com" <
pf...@aol.com>
wrote:
>If watts is watts, again to be crude, 1 A @ 2,300 V = 10 A @ 230V v,
[Quoting removed because of line lengths]
Yes, that makes sense. I was thinking the output was the amp rating.
Since you mentioned the fuses, I am aware of them on the input. In fact
years ago, I had one of them blow during a storm. A shower of sparks was
seen. The power company replaced it and all was fine again.
I do question how much they are fused to match the loads though. Some
years ago, I was at a yearly community meal at the small town's
reception center. I think every woman in town brought their electric
roasters, which use about 12 amps each. I counted 26 roasters, plus a
few large elec coffee pots. The building this was in, was fairly new,
with adaquate wiring. However, it was a very hot day. There is a trailer
park across the road, and I bet half them trailers had their air
conditioners on. That trailer park is to the same pole transformer. So,
add it up. 26 roasters = 312A. 3 coffee pots at around 10A each, plus
lighting, and that meal was drawing around 350A.
Who knows what the trailer park was drawing, and the meal center's AC
may have been on too.
Then the power went out. We had to eat cool food by candle light, until
the town's fire dept came with some generators for lighting.
The power company came, and they went up on the pole. The guy burned his
hand on that transformer. That thing was so hot they could not do
anything with it till it cooled. It was rated at 25 KVA. Hours later
they finally were able to replace it, and put in a 37.5 KVA. That
transformer fried before the fuse blew !
If that transformer had been touching the wooden post, I bet there would
have been a fire, but it was on brackets that held it away from the
wood. Even a few hours later, when they brought in a crane with a steel
cable to lower it to the ground, the guys said it was too hot to touch
and they could not load it on their truck. One of the guys suggested
hosing it with cold water, but I left before they did that.