Is line voltage line to line or line to neutral?

Is line voltage line to line or line to neutral?

In a Single-Phase Supply system, the lower voltage (typically 120V) will be the ‘Line to Neutral Voltage’ which is the voltage between one of the lines and the neutral. The higher voltage (typically 240V) will be the ‘Line to Line Voltage’.

What is line voltage?

Line voltage is the voltage measured between any two lines in a three-phase circuit. In balanced “Y” circuits, the line voltage is equal to phase voltage times the square root of 3, while the line current is equal to phase current.

What is difference between line current and line voltage?

Line voltage is the voltage seen on the AC line, typically single phase. Line current is the current that results when that voltage is applied to a load. If you have a 3 phase line, then each of the 3 phases (a separate wire) has it’s own voltage, phase voltage.

What does the line to line voltage mean?

The line to line voltage is the voltage between any two of the three phase wires ABC, e.g. Vab. With delta, there is no neutral wire available and so the voltage between any two of the three available phase wires is the line voltage by default. Most three-phase power service is provided through a “wye” connection.

What is line voltage and phase voltage?

The conductors between a voltage source and a load are called lines, and the voltage between any two lines is called line voltage. The voltage measured between any line and neutral is called phase voltage. For example, for a 208Y/120 volt service, the line voltage is 208 Volts, and the phase voltage is 120 Volts.

What is the definition of line voltage?

Definition of line voltage. : the voltage of a power transmission circuit or distribution circuit up to the point of transformation or utilization. You must — there are over 200,000 words in our free online dictionary, but you are looking for one that’s only in the Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary.