What to do if the voltage in the house drops to 160 volts?

Hello. I have such a situation. Bought a house in the village. Here, everyone jumps from 160 to 250 volts. My house is the last on the branch. I allocated 5 kW. When I turn on the load of 1.5-2 kW, the voltage drops to 160 and starts to jump. There is a Resant stabilizer of 5000 watts. Electricians can do nothing, they say the load is very large on their substation. Tell me, if I put a step-up autotransformer at 5 kW and after it I leave my stabilizer, will the situation be corrected? I just want to put convectors for heating. Or maybe something else advise? Thanks in advance.

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2 comments

  • Admin

    Hello! The stabilizer will draw even more current from the network and land the line harder. Here it is necessary to demand an increase in the power of the transformer at the substation. Well, if so, then apparently your stabilizer has a range of input voltages that does not include a real voltage of 160 volts. It is better to substitute an autotransformer or LATR or an autotransformer with taps from the windings to adjust the voltage. I would do so. You can contact the company, make you such a tool to order. LATER TDGC2 5 kVA 220 Volt should fit this one.
    Please note that this is only one of the solutions to this situation. You can also try using voltage converters with double conversion. They have a good supply voltage range.

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    • Tina

      Sorry to interfere, but Resanta has a range of 140-260 in. But already at 190, power drops by 40%, and below (I assume) even lower. Therefore, when choosing a stabilizer, this had to be taken into account and set to 8-10000V, depending on the load. (IMHO not a professional)

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