I have ordered T5 light fixtures for my metal building which have universal voltage ballasts that will accept 110 to 277 volts. The guy I ordered the fixtures from said the lights would use less current if wired for 220V. Can someone explain this?
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other than efficiency there would be no other reason to use the 277 tap on the ballast. a three phase service 120/208-277 would be needed for 277. voltage of 220-240 wouldn't save you anything. you'd actually measure 277 volts to the neutral with a meter.
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Well my light fixtures were finally delivered and I hung and wired them yesterday. Initially they were on 120V, but today I added another breaker and moved the neutral and marked it appropriately. Now the lights are running on 240V. Yes, the electronic ballast auto-detected the input voltage and my light switches were HD switches from Lowes that are good to 277V.
If nothing else, it's different. Thanks HayZee518!
I was going to post pictures but..."You are only allowed to post URLs to other sites after you have made 15 posts or more."
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Well it would depend on the ballast. Here is the spec sheet for the ballast used in my lights...http://www.ace-ballast.com/articles/...-A2_54T5XS.pdf
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