Submitted by rcmaehl t3_yf0m5q in mildlyinteresting
PoopCrayon70-1 t1_iu1ohv4 wrote
Comment and question:
It's DC so no way it's 3 phase. Common y'all
Question: what's the insulation on the bus bar? Never seen that. Typical I've seen is epoxy dip...
rcmaehl OP t1_iu1otwm wrote
AC coming in has to be 3 phase though? Can't just throw these on residential lines.
This is entirely based on random reading of US highway charging station planning with the infrastructure bill that passed so I'm not 100% sure what I'm talking about, just that it was mentioned as required and not available everywhere.
PoopCrayon70-1 t1_iu1pcyh wrote
Common misconception but good question. It can be single phase or 3 phase depending on the supply voltage. That is achieved through a transformer.
These types of applications involve an inverter that will convert ac to DC.
I don't know much about DC but this application screams DC
Gaff1515 t1_iu27s78 wrote
That is a dc fast charger and almost certainly has 3 phase ac coming into. Output is likely 150 or 350kw dc
PoopCrayon70-1 t1_iu30tvv wrote
Almost certainly? So in your expert opinion: is is 120/208, 120/240, 277/480¿
One of these answers makes it a trick question...
Gaff1515 t1_iu3xed5 wrote
Actually none of those answers makes it a trick question. All three of you choices can be three phase. Maybe you’re not the expert you think you are on AC. (120/240 can be 3 phase with a high b leg, very uncommon but still exists in Chicago area).
ShortingBull t1_iu3r4gf wrote
>Question: what's the insulation on the bus bar? Never seen that
Looks like heat shrink to me.
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