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by wtallis
230 days ago
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For residential lighting running off a single-phase supply, there are some annoying LED bulbs with simple half-wave rectification that strobe at the grid frequency with less than a 50% duty cycle (often seen with bulbs emulating vintage exposed-filament bulbs with no frosted glass). It would be interesting to see how much less annoying that kind of flicker is when you have a three-phase supply to a light fixture, so that at least one set of LEDs was illuminated at all times. |
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In the US, there are 208V single-phase and 480V single-phase lights that use two of the three phases. In practice, indoor lighting is either 277V (line to neutral on a 480V service) or 120V (line to neutral on a 208V service). Most commercial LED fixtures can use any voltage between 120V to 277V single-phase.
480V single phase is used for some pole lighting with long runs of conductors to handle voltage drop. Anything over 277V has to be elevated at least 22 feet off the ground per the NEC.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta–wye_transformer