How Can I Automatically Balance a 3-Phase Electrical System at Home?

AI Thread Summary
A homeowner with a 3-phase electrical system is seeking a solution to automatically balance the load across the phases to prevent power tripping when high-load appliances operate simultaneously. The current setup leads to issues when multiple heavy-load devices, like a water heater and underfloor heating, activate, causing the entire house to lose power. Suggestions include consulting an electrician to measure and redistribute loads, but the homeowner is looking for a device that can automatically manage the current distribution. A potential resource mentioned is a company that offers transformers for phase balancing, although details on their products are limited. The discussion emphasizes the need for an effective solution to manage high loads without manual intervention.
RogerT
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My home is supplied by 3-phase electricity.
When the electricians installed the system, they made guesses at how to balance the loads across the 3 phases.
The country that I live in limits the amount of power available through each phase with a closed box that trips out if ANY ONE of the phases exceeds a certain current.
So if the cooker and the water heater are on the same phase and are on together, the power trips out for the entire house.

I am wondering if there is some device I can connect to the 3 'live' cables inside the house, that automatically divides the current being pulled equally across the 3 phases.

Does anyone have any ideas?

Many thanks in advance.
 
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RogerT said:
;3478192Does anyone have any ideas?
Yep. Get an electrician to measure each phases load and move appropriately.

Welcome to PF
 
Yeah, thanks for the idea but that's not really going to help.

The problem is when we use a high load item and another one kicks in either on auto, or timer, or because someone in the house doesn't know.

example would be water heater and underfloor heating. Both are heavy load, but set on thermostats.

I need a circuit that sits between the loads and the supply and automatically routes the power through the phases equally. so if we are pulling 15kw, it pulls 5kW from each phase.

I didn't think this would be something I'd get from the local hardware store, but you never know?! ;0)

(the total potential load in the house is much greater than the allowable supply - in case I didn't make that clear up front)
 
You might try contacting these people, the website does not give very much detail on power capability or price but it is at least a starting place.
http://www.polyphaz.com/Three_phase_to_single_phase_transformers.htm
 
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thanks, I will look into that ;)
 
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