I thought our local distribution voltage was 16kV - until I noticed a warning sign for overhead wires on a construction site the other day. Marked '21kV'. [the equipment operators don't actually give a damn about the voltage, they don't want to contact the lines regardless. i presume the info is there in case of need] 20kV was the standard in much of Europe, but they may have moved higher as well, for the same reason.
Castenea wrote:darrell wrote:At 17,000 volts, which is the most common voltage for power lines in residential areas in the US, 1 GW would require 588,235 amps, which would be a main bus bar of 2,000 square centameters, or 44 CM (18") on a side, so now we know how spanner got his name when he dropped one.
I thought the standard distribution primary in the US was 11000 volts to ground or 13.3KV phase to phase. Homes generally have a transformer pulling from one phase and delivering 120V to ground to the house. Large buildings (e.g. 20 apartments) can have 13.3KV three phase going into a transformer in the basement. I have heard of factories who have 3-phase 33KV going into a substation in the building. I believe 33KV is the largest distribution normally seen in the US.