[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Re: "Repeaters", etc.



On 5/28/24 20:45, David Wright wrote:
On Tue 28 May 2024 at 13:54:36 (-0400), Paul M Foster wrote:
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 06:37:35PM +0100, debian-user@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Michael Grant <mgrant@grant.org> wrote:
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 06:11:48PM +0100, debian-user@howorth.org.uk
wrote:
Most houses in the UK are wired to a single phase, so everything is
connected together at the consumer unit and powerline works just
fine. If you have a specific problem, then there are DIN rail
powerline units designed specifically to be mounted in the CU to
spread the signal better over ALL the circuits.

If your house has 3-phase wiring, which is unusual in the UK, then
you may have a problem because powerline signals do need to be on
the same phase.

Most houses in the UK are on one phase. When there's a failure on only
one or two phases, you can walk down the street and work out which
houses could be on which by whose lights are still on.

I think that with solar generation and battery charging, that may be
changing. (I don't know as I don't live there.) But I think that
building regulations will still prevent you from having different
phases in different rooms. (Think of the problems when using
extension cables.)

Note that here I'm meaning true three-phase power, with each phase
at 120° to the others.

In the U.S. (as mentioned before), the voltage between "hots" is 240V, and
between "hot" and "neutral" on any phase is 120V. I'm not sure why our
systems were designed this way.

You get supplied with a single phase (in the 120° sense above) split
into two. The split power is still on one phase, so the two hots are
at 180° to each other. This means you can run devices require 240V
between one hot and the other: they're easily recognised by their
huge outlets with wacky pin layouts when they're discrete devices, but
usually they're plumbed in. AC, (electric) water heaters and dryers,
ranges, etc.

But I do know that it is possible to have
circuits on both phases share a neutral. Thus, if the load on each phase is
the same, the neutral will carry no current.

If you're using both splits for 240V, then the neutral should be
irrelevant. AIUI a current flowing through the neutral is what makes
the old-fashioned 3-pin devices potentially dangerous: with poor
earthing, the frame can become partially live (sometimes detectable
by passing the back of your hand over the metalwork).

In any given room in a house,
it is entirely possible to have to receptacles which are on different
phases, and possibly sharing a neutral (though this isn't required).

Except at the service. Properly wired, the neutral and static grounds are bonded ONLY in the service box. I am constantly amazed at the people who call themselves electricians, who think the static ground and the neutral are interchangeable just because they are bonded at the service.

I lost a couple phone modems bavk in the later years of the 1900's. When I build on a garage in 2008 I put a fresh 200 amp service in and made the house a subcircuit AND made sure my grounding was up to NEC specs, and that the static grounds to the round pins of the duplexes were indeed grounded ONLY at the new service.

WV, like most places, can put on quite an electrical show, but I've not damaged a piece of powered gear since. 16 years, no lightning damage. I even have a 70 foot run of cat5 from the house to a shed with some of my cnc gear in it, that has been blowing in the wind since I built that shed in the middle 90's. Same piece of used cat5, now 30+ years old. Feeding a hub, feeding 2 computers, zero net problems as 2024 marches on. The NEC is correct, now we just have to teach the electricians how to read it.

Confusing terms, aren't they: they're a single-phase split, often
called legs, as below, to avoid that ambiguity.

On Tue 28 May 2024 at 13:20:19 (-0400), Michael Grant wrote:
In the US, most houses are wired with 240V split-phase giving 120V to
a mains outlet.  It's a 50/50 crapshot if you are on the same leg in a
different part of the house.  I don't know if some electricians like
to put all the mains outlets on the same leg or not.  I don't know if
these ethernet over power things will work over different legs.  The
legs share a neutral and ground, so maybe!  I'd be interested to know!

With Powerlines, I see no systematic difference in connection speed
between same leg and opposite legs. However, you do get some outlets
worse than the rest, but I can only surmise that the cause is noise,
possibly from computers etc, or perhaps the individual circuit
breakers. I've never tried to track it down, but it's something to
look out for.

X10 did at one time sell a coupler, but because it couples a 255V circuit, potentially a huge fire hazard, is quite pricey. Even at the peak heyday of x10 stuff for household control, it priced itself out of a slot on the shelves at Lowes and Home Depot. So most were never aware such a gizmo existed.

I only ever expect to get 500Mbps because of having two different
generations of Powerline devices.

Cheers,
David.

.

Cheers, Gene Heskett, CET.
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
 soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author, 1940)
If we desire respect for the law, we must first make the law respectable.
 - Louis D. Brandeis


Reply to: