Gros Ventre
Well-known member
- First Name
- Bill
- Joined
- Nov 13, 2021
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- Location
- Western Wyoming
- Vehicles
- Powerboost
The Green Box labels this as the backside of a NEMA Box. Not really. Look carefully: It is a standard junction box linked to the NEMA Plug Box on the outside using a threaded pipe nipple to join the two thru the house wall.I ran across this as well lately. I wasn't going to bring it up but since you did..... This EE apparently does major installations of power systems and knows the NEC well, so he has the background.
His solution is at the generator cord's plug-in box, to connect the cord's ground to the box, but do not continue the ground to the service panel.
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However he has stated in his comments that:
1) He is only showing this because people need a cheaper solution than a 3 pole transfer switch for example, which is the best solution, but people will shortcut so what ways are safe?
and
2) He has not decided if this is a safe solution for a F-150 PowerBoost. I just asked again and he said he hasn't decided yet.
Presumably because the F-150 is on rubber tires and is not earth grounded, which possibly complicates the idea of it being a "separately derived system" since breaking the ground wire between the cord plug-in and the breaker panel removes the earth ground connection for the ground wire (yet the circuit from the F-150 TO the cord plug-in box still has a ground return so GFCI still works on that portion of it). This is in contrast to the neutral switching transfer panel (e.g. Generac 6852), which carries the ground wire through it to the load panel which goes to the earth ground rod.
Note this is NOT the same as removing the ground pin on your 30A cord from the PB to the plug-in box, that provides NO protection when you are anywhere from the F150, along the cord, up to the plug-in box.
Here is one of his diagrams, which will be helpful to reference for discussion, showing the disconnected ground wire from the plug-in box to the main breaker panel.
Also note that he shows the generator tied to an earth ground - but he said in a comment reply that is not needed as the main load panel already has a ground rod. ? And I'm wondering about how GFCI would work on the main panel breakers that has it. So confusing.
What do you electricians think (don't guess or presume like me, if you don't know please).
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