I'm guessing you are referring to your findings in Canada and are perfectly believable and consistent. In my area of the US (Middle Atlantic region), I typically find 120V in the suburbs of DC but a bit lower within DC however...there are exceptions to that rule too. It can also depend on how the electrician taps a step down transformer as often the power coming into a building is 277/480 in commercial spaces. If the electrician measuring the incoming, and taps the transformer correctly, you end up with nominal 120/208...if not it can indeed be low or high. I had one theatre that tended towards 125V and others that tended towards 115.
In a suburb in Maryland, I was on a government owned facility and found that the voltage was tending towards 115V and caused all of the current to run a bit higher on the rectifiers/ballast as they were tending towards only 200VAC L-L. I asked for the transformers to be retapped for 120V L-N and you'd think I asked for the moon and the stars despite the transformer(s) having the taps that clearly identified what should be used based on incoming voltage. In some of the systems we were running 6KW lamps and the low-bid breakers/load centers would get VERY warm to the touch and would false-trip. Still they refused retap the incoming to attain 120V L-N 208 L-L. I guess the manufacturer of the transformer put those extra taps in for show.
In a suburb in Maryland, I was on a government owned facility and found that the voltage was tending towards 115V and caused all of the current to run a bit higher on the rectifiers/ballast as they were tending towards only 200VAC L-L. I asked for the transformers to be retapped for 120V L-N and you'd think I asked for the moon and the stars despite the transformer(s) having the taps that clearly identified what should be used based on incoming voltage. In some of the systems we were running 6KW lamps and the low-bid breakers/load centers would get VERY warm to the touch and would false-trip. Still they refused retap the incoming to attain 120V L-N 208 L-L. I guess the manufacturer of the transformer put those extra taps in for show.
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