3 phase equipment on 1 phase supply

AI Thread Summary
A user is seeking advice on using a 3-phase plasma cutter in a 1-phase garage, noting that converting to 3-phase is too costly. They mention a potential "sub-phase" method that could allow operation with a 90º phase separation, albeit with reduced efficiency. The plasma cutter is identified as a Miller Spectrum 701, and the user has the operating manual with a circuit diagram. Suggestions include rewiring for single-phase operation, using a rotary or solid-state phase converter, or possibly connecting a transformer in a specific configuration. The discussion emphasizes the importance of safety measures and the technical challenges of operating high-power 3-phase equipment on a domestic supply.
Ca$h
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
I was given a 3 phase plasma cutter (no motor in machine only transformers)and my garage is only 1 phase. I have been doing a little research on converting 1 phase to 3 phase but it is just to expensive for my budget! I did come across an article that suggested that is can be done without a phase converter. It was talking about a "sub-phase" not really sure how it works. I do know that a normal 3 phase separation is 120º and with 220v a/c the phase separation is 180º it said that with the "sub-phase" has a 90º phase separation. It does however lower the efficiency of the machine. That I can live with. If anyone knows a way I could do this I would be very thankful.
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
Maybe you could have your electric utility bring three phase to you. Very expensive also probably. Other than that you are probably out of luck.
 
What power is the machine?

What is make and part number? Is there a circuit diagram?

If it converts to DC and has a transformer you might be able to rewire it for single phase OR rebuild the power supply with a single phase transformer.

3-phase machines tend to be high power and too much for domestic supplies.
 
I have been told the reason a lot of 3-phase plasma cutters are 3-phase is because when the are full-wave rectified they have a very smooth output with little ripple since all of the phases tend to overlap. Naturally current requirements per phase will also be less than single phase.
 
The Plasma cutter is a Miller Spectrum 701. I do have the operating manual that has the a circuit diagram.
 
If you have an unused three phase induction motor, you can produce an approx three phase system by using of one single phase source.

For a short discussion you can refer to Machine question No.19 from http://electrical-riddles.com.
 
You can make or buy a rotary phase converter, which is what msj suggests, but I have been told they don't balance the phases very well. There are also solid state phase converters which, like a VFD, chop the input signal to DC, then rebuild it to what you need. They aren't cheap, though.

Here's one: http://www.phaseperfect.com/
 
Looks like it does come in a single phase version. A single phase transformer may be available. It is not partucularly high power 6.5 - 7.5 kW so I don't know why they bother with 3 phase.

If the transfomer is a Y (Delta) input it may be possible to strap all the phases to 'live' and connect the centre point of the transformer to neutral. Maybe try one, two and all three phases. If it does seem to work check that the transfomer does not run too hot.

If you try it you must have an RCD (earth fault trip breaker) and a suitably low current circuit breaker and/or fuse in circuit. IF ANY DOUBT DONT.
 
The reason they use 3 phase is as I stated in my previous post. Less regulation and filtering is required after the rectifiers when using 3 phase since the voltage never falls to zero.
 
Back
Top