Oops, Buggered up the reply, I try again...
It is actually 2 circuit not two phase.
They are running a pair of toroidal transformers to get the capacity and
feeding each one off a separate 220 circuit so you would not need a monster
feeder to the shack.
Also, I imagine there are electrical code limitations for feeder size in homes.
Tankless water heaters use a similar technique to get around needing a 100 amp
circuit to run by running two 50 amp circuits and splitting up the heaters
between them.
Eight small dc supplies stacked in series to make the high voltage. A little
different, probably saves on having to have really high voltage capable
insulation in the transformers.
The OM power website is showing a number of fcc approved amps, however the
website appears to be a little scrambled right now as all links return to the
home page
Chris
VE3CEA
From: Gary Schafer<mailto:garyschafer@largeriver.net>
Sent: September 14, 2016 1:21 PM
To: 'Charles H'<mailto:k4vud@hotmail.com>; 'Bill
Turner'<mailto:dezrat@outlook.com>; 'Amps group'<mailto:amps@contesting.com>;
'Ampsgroup'<mailto:amps@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [Amps] Acom 2000A - typical output power?
Hmmm, 2 phase power, that's kind of rare.
73
Gary K4FMX
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Amps [mailto:amps-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Charles H
> Sent: Saturday, September 10, 2016 7:54 PM
> To: Bill Turner; Amps group; Ampsgroup
> Subject: Re: [Amps] Acom 2000A - typical output power?
>
> Needing real 1500 out and real continuous output at that power..........
>
> 1. I would check the OM Power model 4000 (several versions) and choose
> the TWO PHASE AC input, yes 2 phase.
>
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