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Would it be practical, or technically possible to economically mass produce 400 volt single phase consumer goods? Light bulbs, kettles, heaters, chargers, TVs, hobs, vacuum cleaners, washers, dryers, microwaves, tools, ect ect?

I'm thinking this would save a lot of copper and make wiring both easier and safer. A 1mm2 cable on a 10 amp breaker would give 4,000 watts of power.
 
Would it be practical, or technically possible to economically mass produce 400 volt single phase consumer goods? Light bulbs, kettles, heaters, chargers, TVs, hobs, vacuum cleaners, washers, dryers, microwaves, tools, ect ect?

I'm thinking this would save a lot of copper and make wiring both easier and safer. A 1mm2 cable on a 10 amp breaker would give 4,000 watts of power.
I'm confused Mate by your conclusions.
 
UK regulation 559.5.1.201 limits lamp holders to 250V.
The biggest cost with cable is usually the installation so reducing the cable size would not save that much. 400V accessories would be bigger and more expensive.
 
It doesn't really matter, different places may settle on different voltages to suit their situation, higher voltages will have issues/costs associated with risk of shock or additional insulation needs etc. Lower voltages with lower shock risk, higher losses and additional costs of conductors etc.

What balance you choose is up to you. In the main internationaly the standard throughout the world is in the 200-250v range - commonly 230v .

This is generally the best balance between all the factors, now it is the main standard most equipment is designed for this voltage, therefore more countries use it, so it's more of a standard, etc.

However there are some countries that are an exception to that in the 110/117v range, these are often purely historical, but once again once in this loop standard voltage - more products - more of a standard etc.
 
UK regulation 559.5.1.201 limits lamp holders to 250V.
The biggest cost with cable is usually the installation so reducing the cable size would not save that much. 400V accessories would be bigger and more expensive.

Can't T&E take 230 volts line to earth? How much does 1mm2 T&E cost vs 2/5mm2 T&E per meter?
 
It doesn't really matter, different places may settle on different voltages to suit their situation, higher voltages will have issues/costs associated with risk of shock or additional insulation needs etc. Lower voltages with lower shock risk, higher losses and additional costs of conductors etc.

What balance you choose is up to you. In the main internationaly the standard throughout the world is in the 200-250v range - commonly 230v .

This is generally the best balance between all the factors, now it is the main standard most equipment is designed for this voltage, therefore more countries use it, so it's more of a standard, etc.

However there are some countries that are an exception to that in the 110/117v range, these are often purely historical, but once again once in this loop standard voltage - more products - more of a standard etc.


Agree. Though would 400 volt as a standard cost more then having 230 volts as a standard?
 
Bizarre idea. And why stop at 400V? Go for 1500V and save even more copper!!


400 volts is already in place, above 1000 volts installations require significantly more complex insulation for guard against partial discharge plus the disconnection times would be difficult if not impossible to achieve.
 
400 volts is already in place, above 1000 volts installations require significantly more complex insulation for guard against partial discharge plus the disconnection times would be difficult if not impossible to achieve.

Why - many large industrial sites use 3.3kV motors and so on.

The voltage isn't fixed at 230 (or 110) - that's just the most suitable for most end users taking into account the factors.

Like why we use 3 phase and not 7 phase and so on - it achieves the best balance given the technology we have
 

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