View Full Version : 3 Phase Question
mdfdust
30th April 2007, 10:06 AM
I am currently doing a long term reno on my house, which has 3 phase power to drive my ducted air con.
My mains are 63amps, and according to the electrician he has spread the house over all three phases.
My question is given that many new houses are apparently 100 Amp. Is there any point in me attempting to upgrade my mains? I believe that the cable running to the house is 16mm (?? - which would have to be replaced in order to go to 100 amp?).
Am i getting any advantage here by having three phase? If so what?
Am I getting potentially 63 Amp on each phases therefore negating any need to go to 100 amp?
rrich
30th April 2007, 02:57 PM
How much current do you expect to use at one time. If that mumber if over 63 amps on each of the phases (all at the same time) then you may need to upgrade.
BTW - During a remodel or our home, I added a 100 amp sub-panel to the shop (errr garage) with a like upgrade to the main panel to 200 amps and my local utility didn't think that increasing the size of the mains (house to pole) was necessary. I have run the cabinet saw and dust collector while SWMBO was cooking (electric oven and electric cook top) with the A/C running. Not a big deal. Although I think that if the clothes dryer was electric and also running there might be a problem with the main tripping.
chrisp
30th April 2007, 03:07 PM
Am i getting any advantage here by having three phase? If so what?
Am I getting potentially 63 Amp on each phases therefore negating any need to go to 100 amp?
You have already answered your first question - you can run three-phase equipment such as a 3-phase air conditioner.
If you have 3 phase at 63 amp per phase, it is the equivalent of 3 x 63 = 189 A single phase. It is hardly worthwhile going to 100A single phase (which is what most new houses would have). You would have to have an awful lot of electrical stuff to need 100A 3-phase supply.
Ausyuppy
5th May 2007, 11:13 PM
Just to clarify what crisp said,
You have 63 amps available per phase, not 189 amps single phase. If you are mainly running single phase items in your garage, ensuring that the load is spread over the three phases in the shed, you wouldnt need 100amps per phase for your property.
If you are worried about the load being drawn in the shed, spread the load over the seperate phases. Im assuming you have 3 phases in the shed?
Cheers
Steve