jim hardy said:
that GISD series is a genuine isolating transformer with electrostatic shield.
It is not clear to me whether the secondary 'floats'.
Since it comprises a 'separately derived system' i'd think the output side neutral ought to tie internally to ground prong of input side, that'd be the internal 'neutral to frame bond' to satisfy NEC 250.30.a.2.a
That would not be an issue on step-UP where the supply has an SGC/neutral. But clearly there is a complication if the supply has no SGC/neutral. I guess in such a case you don't get to use that exception since its requirement cannot be complied with.
jim hardy said:
Good question for Stancor guys. Or find one and check with ohmmeter.
If so would that work for your application?
No. Since the need for the step-down is part of a three phase 208/120 volt system, with the part being just 2 hot wires in a 2-wire branch circuit, that would leave the result floating "off center" and thus with a relative (even of just capacitively coupled) voltage to ground. I don't want those issues. It needs to be a correctly grounded 120V-like (will be 104V) system.
I am doing this to avoid having to wire an extra circuit or an extra neutral wire just to power one device. Fortunately, since starting this thread, I have found a version of the device (a KVM switch) that uses an IEC connector for power and handles 100-240. So the need no longer exists, although it's still an interesting issue to ponder.
I could have just wired 208 volts to a NEMA 5-15R, but the colocation facility prohibits doing that (and I agree with them ... I would do exactly the same thing if in that role).
jim hardy said:
Be careful, Stancor makes autotransformer stepdowns that look real similar.
EDIT finally found a drawing
http://www.stancor.com/pdfs/install_sheets/0037-6215.pdf
looks discouraging
i wonder how they get away with selling that tranformer with floating secondary?
There are uses for something to be fully isolated and floating. Eliminating ground loops in interconnected equipment could be one of those uses. if I had an electrical test bench, I'd want one of those to be handy.
BTW, I also have a use, here at home, for a step-UP transformer. But it gets more complicated because there are TWO ways to wire an AUTOtransformer, and both of them have a valid use with 240V secondaries. Stepping up from 120 to 240 in an autotransformer involves a primary tap in the middle of the 240V winding (or between two 120V windings, depending on your perspective). The two ways are just reversing which input wire has the system grounded conductor.
1. If the grounded neutral input connects to the shared end of the winding, then the output has one end grounded, too. The remaining output wire is 240V relative to ground. This is how you get power in virtually all of Europe and most of the world.
2. If the grounded neutral input connects to the center point of the winding, then the output has both ends ungrounded, but 120V relative to ground in opposite phase angles. This is how you get 240V power in North America where "single phase" is provided.
I would want #2 but travel transformers are likely wired like #1.
FYI, the reason for wanting #2 at home would be satisfied by either a 120-0-120 system or a 60-0-60 system. I have a laptop with some metal parts. It is connected with a brick PSU that has an IEC C8 connector, and thus no ground. So the average voltage potiential across the two incoming wires is going to be coupled across to the DC. So the output is technically the sum of 60V AC and 12V DC. When I press hard on the metal, the 60V AC is pulled down since it has a very high impedance in the coupling. But a light touch gives that tingling effect. Unplugging the power and running from battery eliminates the tingling effect, so there is no doubt. My theory is if I get the input center referenced to real ground, then the resulting effect will eliminate the AC component in the DC, relative to ground (and air, and me) and I won't get the tingling effect from a light touch, anymore.
I may just have to get a 6-20R circuit wired to my computer desk area for this.