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Household power is not correctly called two-phase.Generally speaking two phase power is actually a single phase system. It takes 2 phases
in and produces single phase out.
Household power is not correctly called two-phase.
It's called split-phase with one phase 180° out-of-phase with the other, (generated from a 220V center-tap transformer output with the center-tap as the neutral).
True two-phase has one phase 90° from the other, and three-phase has the phases 120° from each other.
And this def over at Wiki - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phase_(waves)In electrical phase it is the expression of relative displacement between waves that have the same frequency. There are two different ways of looking at phases. First, it is when the voltages are out of phase with each other, as with three-phase power, and second, when the voltage is out of phase with the current.
I never said that it had to be 90° to be multiphase, only that 2-phase is normally 90°.I think any
two sources with a non zero phase, but same waveshape, is multiphase, not just
90 degrees.