In North America, individual residences and small commercial buildings with services up to about 100 kVA (417 amperes at 240 volts) will usually have
three-wire single-phase distribution, especially in rural areas where motor loads are small and uncommon. In rural areas where no three-phase supply is available, farmers or households who wish to use three-phase motors may install a
phase converter. Larger consumers such as large buildings, shopping centers, factories, office blocks, and multiple-unit apartment blocks have three-phase service. In densely populated areas of cities, network power distribution is used with many customers and many supply transformers connected to provide hundreds or thousands of
kilo-volt-amperes, a load concentrated over a few hundred square meters. High-power systems, hundreds of kilovolt-amperes or larger, are nearly always three-phase. The largest supply normally available as single-phase varies according to the standards of the electrical utility. In the
United Kingdom a single-phase household supply may be rated 100 A or even 125 A, meaning that there is little need for three-phase in a domestic or small commercial environment. Much of the rest of Europe has traditionally had much smaller limits on the size of single phase supplies resulting in even houses being supplied with three-phase (in urban areas with three-phase supply networks). If heating equipment designed for a 240-volt system is connected to two phases of a 208-volt supply, it will produce only 75% of its rated heating effect. Single-phase motors may have taps to allow their use on either 208-volt or 240-volt supply. A single-phase load may be powered directly from a
three-phase distribution transformer in two ways: by connection between one phase and
neutral or by connection between two phases. These two give different voltages from a given supply. For example, on a 120/208 three-phase system, which is common in North America, the phase-to-neutral voltage is 120 volts and the phase-to-phase voltage is 208 volts. This allows single-phase lighting to be connected phase-to-neutral. Single-phase power may be used for
electric railways; the largest
single-phase generator in the world, at
Neckarwestheim Nuclear Power Plant, supplied a railway system on a dedicated
traction power network. ==Grounding==