HammaMan
Well-known member
Portable generators are bonded, and your panel is also bonded. As such there's always current returning on both the neutral and the ground. Probably 9 in 10 home connections to portable generators run this way, if not more as even electrician installed receptacles pay no attention to the fact that portable generators run bonded. There's no reason to earth a generator over the structure's earthing which most of the time is superior to whatever someone will cobble together for a portable gen temp connection.to ensure my novice understanding is correct; I have an inlet setup with a interlock on my panel.
to get the ground fault to stop happening whenever I enable loads after transferring sources ; I could just disconnect the ground from the inlet wiring?
is this problematic if I decide to use my portable generator in the same fashion?
thanks in advance!
That connection can only be powered on when the main power coming into the panel is 'off' and connecting a generator completes all of the requisite wiring to make a safe connection to the structure. The truck's GFI system and the panel's properly installed GFI breakers will function as they should. Grounding and earth grounds confuse people who can't understand the goals of what's trying to be achieved. If you see someone suggest to earth the truck, they've got just enough understanding of things like someone suggesting drinking bleach would cure someone of a virus.
Depending on your setup, you may have to insulate the entire ground wire of that receptacle at the panel. If you do that, kill the power to that panel before proceeding. Manipulating bare copper in a live panel is about the only thing dumber than playing in a live panel to begin with. Also keep in mind that if metal conduit runs to the gen power in box, the ground may be still connected to it where the prongs are. You can ascertain if that's the case by measuring the resistance of opposing prongs to make sure there's no continuity post ground wire isolation.
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