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| Originally Posted by tcpuser Thanks in advance for any thoughts you may be able to offer. |
Electrical supply is based on a circuit. A circuit made by the supply transformer on a "hot" phase and a neutral via a fuse panel to a load.
The wiring of that circuit has to be based on the maximum current in that circuit.
So a 60 Amps circuit has be wired from transformer to fuse panel with AWG 3/0 or AWG 4/0 wiring, depending the distance between transformer and panel.
But once in the panel, the load is split up into sub loads.
And each of these sub loads have to be wired accordingly to the rules. AWG 4, 2, 1, etc. depending on the load and the distance from panel to load.
Now if we split the entire main lot into two, using a second (sub) panel, the wiring between these panels has to be related to the max current involved in that circuit.
And in every case each sub load has wiring depending on load in the circuit. So that mean both the "hot" and the neutral wires have to be of the same size.
Never and nowhere within a circuit a neutral is bigger or smaller that the "hot" wire.
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In two or three phase systems the conditions differ from what I understand you are dealing with.
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In two phase systems there is 180 degree phase shift between phases. The current through neutral is the difference between the currents in the phases wires.
If the phase wires carry the same current (a 220 Volt only system), the neutral does not carry any current.
If the two phase system has 220 volt circuits and 11o volt circuits, the neutral carries the difference between the phase wires. So the neutral current can be anything between nil and the highest current in any of these phase wires, but never higher (because the
difference in current in the phase wires equals the current in the neutral wire).
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Note that in a three phase system that is different again, as the currents are here 120 degrees out of phase.But I think we better leave that to the specialists!
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But back to sub load circuits : equal wires in each circuit, regardless if it is a "hot" or a neutral wire, or is a 1, 2, or 3 phase system! So you logic is not sound, as it is based on the wrong assumptions.
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I hope this helps you!
