Has anyone ever tried to lower their mains voltage by using the old transformer secondary in series with the mains and primary connected in the normal fashion trick?
Just say you have a 60amp supply and want to drop your voltage by 10v, get a 10v 60amp transformer (600VA so not too big) and connect the secondary in series with the incoming supply (after the meter and before the CU)
Then connect the primary across the mains.
End result you subtract or add (depending on which way you connect) the secondary voltage away from your existing mains voltage.
Anyone ever tried it? Or does anyone use it in their house - obviously there are safety considerations etc.. but its a nice simple way to affect your supply voltage.
Of course with a couple of different secondary tappings, some voltage monitoring and some big relays/contactors you could maintain a steady voltage irrespective of local variations caused by demand etc...
I've always quite fancied trying it, not least because until I saw this method I thought the only way to achieve the same result would have been a really big (in the case above ~ 15KVA) isolation transformer with a near 1:1 ratio which is obviously gonna be big and heavy and pricey.
Please again note, that this could be potentially dangerous, I'm not suggesting anyone tries it, and clearly you'd need to be mindful of the heavy currents involved and make the necesary precautions.
-Dan