220 doesn't divide the load evenly, each leg has same amount . If a motor draws 20 amps then each leg has 20 amps on it , no way does it get divided on each leg with 220 . Sorry doser i do not agree and i will bet your life on it. lol
Right. The current flows from the one hot to the other. The neutral line, which is at 110v from either hot, is not used except sometimes as a ground.
Ohms Law V = AxR where V = voltage, A = current, R = resistance
also W = AV where W = watts
From ohms law, A = R/V so that
W = VxV/R or V^2/r ( In English, watts equals the square of the voltage divided by the resistance.)
This means that for a given length of cable with a resistance of R, doubling the voltage will drive 4x as much power through the same cable!
There are many common examples that demonstrate this:
Car battery cables. It can take 5kW to turn the engine over to start. Since the battery delivers 12v, the cables are 4ga. The same load on a 110v appliance, a small AC for example, runs on 12 ga wires from the outlet.
Power transmission lines: Power lines are run at very high voltage which is then stepped down through a transformer just before reaches the service at the house. These voltages are extremely dangerous. Utility company workers get killed. The lines have to be high above the ground with special insulators where they are supported by the pylon and you need big, heavy duty stepdown transformers. All very expensive but worth it because it allows using much smaller conductors over long distances.
I have an arc welder. It puts out up to 300A at 24v. The welding cables are 1/0 (thicker than 1ga !) The power cord to the welder supplies 220v through 6ga cables.
Look at any stepdown transformer. The high voltage windings are always a smaller gauge than on the low voltage side.
Domestic house wiring runs at 110V in the US. This can be, and too often is lethal. Why not use 24v for domestic circuits? Again because of the expense of the wiring.