Our house here house 3-Phase power, as do many other Australian homes.
Great thing is, you can split your household electrical load across the three, so adding a significant load (i.e. a kettle, water heater, microwave, air-conditioner) doesn't cause the lights to dim.
Mainly, it exists for the central-airconditioning unit fitted to our house (many Central A/Cs in Australia, larger ones particularly, a 3Ph), but also for the original electrical stove, which used a two-pole (2 phase?) breaker.
The house is also fitted with a solar water heater, using an electric boost (single phase, 15A)
A heavy-duty outlet for a dryer in the kitchen (20 or 25A)
Single lighting circuit
Three circuits for the outlets
So, with the original stove, the house technically had three voltages:
- "240v" (In my town, it generally runs VERY hot at 250-255v)
- 380v (Probably more, with the hot power). With a new stove, we fitted a double-outlet to this, and either 1 phase is disused, OR, its been split between the two outlets)
- 415v (Full three-phase, again, probably hotter than this).