Hi All. In the middle of rehabbing a Multicam 6x12 and feeling frustrated about just how many voltage numbers I am seeing both in my cabinet, device manuals, and in online resources as I piece things together. Can someone take me to school? My spindle is rated at 220 Delta, my spindle VFD and servo drives want 208-230, my CNC cabinet has a big fat 208v badge on it and people tell me the whole system can run on 240 delta. I know that the only actual 3 phase US power standard in the ballpark is either 120/208Y or 120/240D (this is all the while I'm seeing people talk about "220" and "110" which I know doesn't exist). I’m so confused.
What gives? Why such an enormous breadth of numbers when it comes to electronics standards? It seems to me that anything that is taking all 3 phase lines (not just one line-neutral) can either take power from a 120/208Y service OR a 120/240D service as most of these internal devices seem to be rated at 230, which is in the 10%+/- allowance of 240v AND 208v.
I recognize the differences between Wye and Delta and the benefits of each as a building supply, however I'm not seeing a difference as far as giving a 3 phase 3 line input beast some juice.
Not looking for opinions, gripes, or what has worked for you by chance. I also recognize there is some ancient history playing into these numbers which I'm not interested in. The biggest goal is to run a machine in the way it's happy with, and not fry anything when it's connected to power for the first time. Guh. Thanks folks.