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Jor,
It is almost certainly a 3 phase generator. As I said before, the advantage of a 3 phase generator is the ability to balance the load among the three phases. If all the load is on a single phase the generator will be operating in an unbalanced condition. Recommend you talk to a local electrician to get a better picture of how the generator is designed to operate. Good luck. Butch Butch "U" wrote in message . .. On Friday 25 November 2005 21:00, Terry Spragg wrote: U wrote: I 'inherited' a 3phase 15KW generator without documentation or even a brand name on it. Why do you say it is 3 phase, if you don't have documents? Generators with 3 hot phase outputs often include delta or Y selection switches. 3 wire output, including neutral, plus ground, could be a 2 hot phase system, with a 4 wire connector output. If it is 2 phase (that's 2 hot phases plus neutral), then the switching makes sense to me. Otherwise, I would be very sceptical. The switches control which wires on the output are connected to output, and which wire is neutral, (itself a hot connector for 110 v output.) I wouldn't go so far as switching while the test toaster is plugged in, unless I was wearing rubber boots. Terry K Terry, The generator is built into a boat I recently purchased. Frankly the only reason I am saying it's 3-phase is because the previous owner told me so and because I know I can get (at least?) two different output voltages at the same time. If 2-phase is normal for a generator (I have no idea) then it could also be 2 phase I suppose. But, is there any advantage being able to choose which wires are connected to the output and which one is neutral? As opposed to the generator simply being wired correctly once and for all in the factory? Thanks, Jor |