Thank you all for your replies, this is most helpful and the Hubbel NEMA chart. I have posted to the Mike Holt forum as suggested. We will be working with local electricians for the installation as well as getting up to speed with the applicable local regulations. At this stage we don't know the location (which US state). This is a commercial application and we will be able to get 240V split phase. The supply in goes to a number of switch mode supplies, so the 240V split phase will be fine, there is no neutral required as nothing requires 120V. We don't want to use 120V as this would require larger conductors and would complicate our existing compliance. The cord is permanently attached and we would supply the equipment with a pre-wired cord to suit.
The Australian (IEC) cord colours of Brown, Blue and Green/Yellow don't seem applicable as the US 240V has two live "Hot" connections and this would conflict with the Blue associated with Neutral in Oz. I believe that for US 240V Red (L1), Black (L2) and Green/Yellow (E) are typically used but I am looking for some input on this for those with local knowledge.
Many thanks again.
Then assuming your power requirements are within the normal Australian 10/15 amp general use outlet a Nema 6-15 is what you want.
Which state is for doesn't matter much. They have different versions of the electrical code, but that is mostly only concerned with the building wiring up through the receptacle. A local electrician asked to install a 6-15/20 outlet will be able to do that to the local code, and as long as your device has a cord with the proper plug it will be fine.
The Australian (IEC) cord colours of Brown, Blue and Green/Yellow don't seem applicable as the US 240V has two live "Hot" connections and this would conflict with the Blue associated with Neutral in Oz. I believe that for US 240V Red (L1), Black (L2) and Green/Yellow (E) are typically used but I am looking for some input on this for those with local knowledge.
Black/Red/Blue are the standard colors for hot conductors in the US (depending on the # of phases). White is neutral and ground can be green, green w/ yellow stripe, or bare copper. Again this is mostly for building codes and a local electrician should get that right when installing the outlet. People usually follow these conventions in line cords and within their equipment, but it's much less controlled. For instance, if a piece of equipment doesn't care about the distinction between line/neutral, it's common to just use black for both.
This is a commercial application and we will be able to get 240V split phase
It's been mentioned, but while this is not unheard of it is definitely uncommon. If you are counting on this make 100% sure. 240 VAC split phase is mostly used in residential areas. It also shows up in smaller commercial buildings, especially if they are in or by a residential zoned area. Most commercial electrical services has 3 phase 208, and a NEMA 6-15/20 outlet in those places will have 208 V not 240. 208 is the nominal voltage, and on one of our building it actually hovers around 199 VAC most of the time. If the building you are operating in has 3-phase service, it won't usually be possible to get 240 VAC without a transformer. I bring this up because we have had several pieces of finnicky equipment from the EU that didn't run on such a low voltage and needed a boost transformer installed by an electrician to operate.
The cord is permanently attached and we would supply the equipment with a pre-wired cord to suit.
Have you considered just having a C14 or C20 power inlet and supplying an appropriate cord like this?
https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/qualtek/226003-01/1466532 along with a sticker saying "208/240 V only"?
I don't generally like doing this unless your equipment could actually function off of either 120 or 208/240 since you can't really stop someone from replacing the cord. But it's not too bad as long as it isn't actually a hazard.