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![]() Buffalo and Philadelphia (including Camden, and undoubtedly RCA's plant as well) were the last hold-outs of two-phase power in the U.S. Are you saying that is what inspired RCA to build these transmitters with a two phase feed to the rectifiers, I think they were the BTA-5G, BTA-10G, BTA-5H, and BTA-10H? I am hypothesizing that RCA utilized some ingenuity and well-known (to two-phase aficionados) engineering techniques to make an unusual box which had some unique cost-savings features. To avoid confusion I call it a 4 pulse, or 6 pulse rectifier, as the case may be. However "incorrect" it may be, the literature calls these "four phase" and "six phase". "Twelve phase" is also employed. This is really three-phase, full-wave, using a "zig zag" transformer. |
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