Post #14,663
10/22/01 7:06:41 PM
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Ah, yes.
What I was thinking of was single phase, (Curse you for making me drag this out of my brain!) - which is compared to a [link|http://www.3phaseconverters.com/u&s_elect.htm|pulsating shower head here]. That's why single-phase hurts more (and is more dangerous?) than 'industrial' 220 (what we used on the farm)...
Imric's Tips for Living- Paranoia Is a Survival Trait
- Pessimists are never disappointed - but sometimes, if they are very lucky, they can be pleasantly surprised...
- Even though everyone is out to get you, it doesn't matter unless you let them win.
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Post #14,669
10/22/01 7:29:15 PM
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Ah well.. now yer gettin fancy
Yes, was thinking only single phase - but if you had 220 AC 3-\ufffd on farm (or businesses with lots of HVAC, say) believe usually that enters building at 440 (!) maybe sometimes 660 VAC. Thus you still have a virtual ground re. splitting into 2? 3? "220" legs.
But here I have no personal experience (getting across such, that is - just 600-700 V. from a chassis PS xfmr. once). However you slice it though, it is all lethal territory; you escape only if skin was pretty dry and contact points not across the chest. Ditto 110-20 with wetter skin.
Survival rule when feeling in places with (supposedly) insulated wires - keep one hand in pocket! and keep palm, fingers extended straight. Then if you hit something, you can pull straight back (and the body WILL do that!) If fingers curled around a source? Your muscle reaction will lock the curled fingers and pull you into 'better' contact.
Most injuries in industry occur from the reaction to the shock - many more than electrocution - the violence of the body's reaction can easily fracture bones, all depending on what objects are nearby. Flying across the room is not unusual, not just Hollywood stuff..
Please.. don't try this at home
:-P
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Post #14,673
10/22/01 7:58:09 PM
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*grin* You'd think!
you escape only if skin was pretty dry No such luck. Most of the 220v I got was when I was working on water pumps... Believe me, 110 single phase hurts - the 3-phase was only uncomfortable, by comparison. Survival rule when feeling in places with... Good rules - here's another: If you are sufficiently casual about getting shocked so that you feel compelled to test whether a wire is live by hand (this attitude is not uncommon among farmers), brush it with the back of your hand - so that if your hand clenches, it breaks contact with the wire. Your muscle reaction will lock the curled fingers and pull you into 'better' contact... ...Most injuries in industry occur from the reaction to the shock Heh - happened to my Dad! Something went wrong with an old circular saw - all metal, it got 'hot'. Dad had to swing the thing around HARD to throw it away from his grip... He was VERY lucky he didn't kill himself with the saw, more or less die from electrocution! It WAS pretty funny, though (he laughs himself... We have an odd sense of humor in our family, I guess).
Imric's Tips for Living- Paranoia Is a Survival Trait
- Pessimists are never disappointed - but sometimes, if they are very lucky, they can be pleasantly surprised...
- Even though everyone is out to get you, it doesn't matter unless you let them win.
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Post #14,677
10/22/01 8:16:29 PM
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Migawd.. it's in your genes!
Workin with wet (in service) water pumps Live? {sheesh} no wonder farming is #1 in accidents - er, willful suicide plays.
Get thee to an unwired wooden building and.. power everything with propane. <<<
(Or - buy a motorcycle; at least have some fun first!)
Ashton
PS yeah, back of hand is good too. But neon pencil-sticks are rilly CHEAP, y'know? {sheeshes} And some gadgets will give an emf warning without touching wire, through the insulation. Go thou and sin no more.
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Post #14,682
10/22/01 8:34:33 PM
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Ya ever shake hands with a farmer?
Count the missing fingers...
And farmers can be just as smart as anyone - in fact, most of the farmers I know are part-plumber, part-electrician, part-carpenter, part-heavy-equipment-operator, part-vet, part-mason, and part-mechanic... Nothing can wait, on a farm, and farmers are kind of, well, desensitized to pain first, then what might cause pain, by extension.
I loved living on the farm.
I don't ever want to be a farmer.
Imric's Tips for Living- Paranoia Is a Survival Trait
- Pessimists are never disappointed - but sometimes, if they are very lucky, they can be pleasantly surprised...
- Even though everyone is out to get you, it doesn't matter unless you let them win.
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Post #14,686
10/22/01 9:05:57 PM
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My uncles ran a machine shop.
I recall driving into 'the city' with my aunt, gramma - about age 7? on occasion of one uncle separating from a finger. (This was from, maybe a 'ranch' but not really a farm; animals though, and real live food.)
I asked him the usual 7-year old question: did you cry? Can see him now, doin a good Jimmy Durante performance of
Cry !! why they could hear me into the next county !! Loved It, and him. While still not used to having to count to 9 (no re-attaches in the dark ages) .. he was willing to get a giggle out of a kid. Class.
Dunno what it's like trying to farm now, compete with Ag-Biz and MBAs, just to live [but can guess] - but my experience of this 'ranch' was.. what could only be an oasis vs any Corp imaginary job. The chores were in fullest sense - educational and healthy.. but a lot more, esp. for a kid. Anyone who imagines farmers as dumb - is stupid, and an ass besides. They know more useful shit (*about* shit too!) than a bevy of PhDs. Cheers,
Ashton at least, back in their territory - with a neighbor doing 'original stuff' ~~ organic farming; developing educational methods to spread it around, while doing it. Great soil here. Just picked my own figs and some of his (last) tomatoes that taste like tomatoes.
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Post #14,689
10/22/01 9:26:26 PM
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Expensive mistake
Oh, to have all this electrical knowledge.
As opposed to me, who screwed up and ordered a pure 220V UPS, and am unable to return it.
Really.
I've got a computer room filled with both 110 and 220 gear. But since I typically deal with 2TB, 4 Sun 450s, and 6 Linux boxes at a time (including power), I will get several UPSs for each project.
I like APC MX5000 Extended Run, which I typically get via CDW: [link|http://www.cdw.com/shop/products/default.asp?EDC=079017|http://www.cdw.com/...p?EDC=079017]
But there is a model listed MX5000, exactly the same (or so I thought), but is the pure European model, which means these wierd 220V plugs (but only a piddly max 15AMP per plug, I use 30 amp 220V for my big boxen).
CDW told me to jam it, they weren't taking it back.
So I've blown about $7000 on 2 of them. I'l scavenge the battery portion and daisy chain them off another one, but the main unit is a waste.
Oh well.
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Post #14,731
10/23/01 3:43:25 AM
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Well.. one possibility
If it's the ~pure sinewave version: 2:1 step-down transformer - though it will be a bit hefty at 3 KW/plug. This won't work for the modified-square-wave of the usual output, intended for switching PS's. (Dunno if Sun uses linear PSs, for some of their ovens?)
(I can't quite see why they'd be unwilling to take it back unused, though. Especially ordering in that league)
Let me know if you plan to toss the guts, please - though I haven't any immediate ideas for use of such a gadget..
Ashton
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Post #14,880
10/23/01 11:47:50 PM
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220 UPS outputs
Check the PSs on your boxen. Many, many of the better quality power supplies nowadays are "universal input", allowing 85 - 245 or 95 - 265V inputs; just change the power cord w/IEC connector for the plug in country of choice. Cuts down on the inventory problems... I'd imagine anything as expensive as a Sun would have such a supply; huge numbers of relatively cheap PCs do.
Even in cases of non-universal input, many still have the switch to allow hi/lo AC input [though it isn't the old-fashioned transformer windings; dunno exactly how they do it -- switching power supplies are black magic to me]
And re: 110/220 -- the one that bugs me is three-phase. First off, why isn't three-phase more common? Wonderful power saver for motors; you could probably make a sizeable dent in base power consumption just by running refrigerators on three-phase power instead of using shaded-pole motors, and my God the air conditioners.
Here in the US we use "Delta" -- the three phases are arranged in a triangle. When it comes onto a premises, there's a ground in the middle of one side. Each side is thus 220 with respect to any other point, but reading from ground, you've got 110, 100, and the "wild phase", 208 volts. Trouble with that is circulating current; if the transformers don't exactly match, current flows around the loop, accomplishing nothing but heating the air. Other countries use "star" (also called "wye"), in which ground is the center and the three windings branch off, not interconnected. No circulating current, better efficiency.
110V three-phase wye would yield about 190V phase-to-phase, and running all three phases would (if the equipment were available) improve efficiency. Is it all a case of coping with legacy (=antique) gear?
Regards, Ric
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Post #14,697
10/22/01 9:58:21 PM
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3-phase voltages.
First of all, Australia's standard is 240V RMS AC. We are one of the few to remain at 240 instead of dropping to 220.
Anyways. 3-phase voltage is usually referred to by the phase-voltage. For 240V, 3-phase is 415V. (For some reason, I seem to remember that 220V is 400V in 3-phase.)
Wade.
"All around me are nothing but fakes Come with me on the biggest fake of all!"
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Post #14,737
10/23/01 6:27:35 AM
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Huh? We just went TO 240, from 220! (BTW, hi--volt was 380v)
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Post #14,742
10/23/01 7:06:58 AM
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Just went *to* 240V...?
That's very ... interesting. Maybe the forces trying to get 220V standardisation have been somewhat reduced in eficacy.
Wade.
"All around me are nothing but fakes Come with me on the biggest fake of all!"
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