BB_TX wrote:
Dutch_12078 wrote:
As has been stated, a GFCI trips when it detects an imbalance between the hot and neutral. The ground has nothing to do with it. ......
That part I understand and am not questioning the lack of a ground on the GFCI outlet itself. What I don’t understand is how you can have a ground fault in an ungrounded RV that would trip a GFCI outlet. To have a ground fault that would trip a GFCI outlet there must be some path for the errant current to drain to a ground source. Otherwise there would never be an imbalance in the individual currents thru the hot and neutral pins of the outlet.
The GFCI outlet has circuitry to detect a connection downstream from itself of a NEUTRAL/GROUND short even if no current is being used. It will trip. I have a BONDING PLUG for my Honda generator so it will work on my EMS-HW30C equipped trailer. If I plug that into a GFCI outlet, the outlet will trip instantly, even though the BONDING PLUG draws no current whatsoever so there can be no current imbalance.