About to install a three-phase Quattro 10K install on an island in the Caribbean (gear en route, install in 3 months), and had a quick question on voltages.
The island here is pretty much all three-phase power, 120/208Y, and I'm good with that. The "quirk" I'm looking at is that the local power utility runs their power a little higher in voltage than normal - it normally comes out the wall around 127V. I've done some quick research and I see that this is common in South America and some other countries (Mexico was called out on Wikipedia), where they hand off two hots from the three-phase system to the home and since most 120V equipment allows for slightly higher voltages, this allows them to offer two-phase "220V" to larger appliances like ovens/dryers, which some appliances like better than a lower 208V. To be clear, we will get all three hots from the utility, not two, but I was wondering if it would be better for appliances in the event I connect to the grid or fail back to the grid for maintenance, if the voltages were more complementary.
I see that in the VE.Connect app, one can change the output voltage of a 120V Quattro (up to 128V), and I was considering if 1) upping the voltage to 127V is an okay/normal thing to do, 2) if upping the voltage in this manner is supported under VE.Configure Multi in a 3-phase setup, and 3) if anyone else has had a similar situation on these forums to tell me good/poor experience(s) with this.
According to most of the manufacturer's specs on the appliances we're having installed, 208V is perfectly acceptable, but definitely at the low end of the specifications, so I don't know if operating Quattros at 127V instead of 120V puts a strain on them or something, or if I shouldn't bother with the 120/127 difference because it will work fine.
Any recommendations?