โMar-04-2022 08:49 AM
โMar-12-2022 06:44 AM
BB_TX wrote:
Get a tester like shown below and plug into a working non GFCI outlet. Then connect RV to shore power and check for correct power. Then plug RV into your generator and again check for correct power. I am thinking you will find an open ground when connected to generator.
Tester
โMar-06-2022 05:48 AM
โMar-06-2022 03:42 AM
BB_TX wrote:
Get a tester like shown below and plug into a working non GFCI outlet. Then connect RV to shore power and check for correct power. Then plug RV into your generator and again check for correct power. I am thinking you will find an open ground when connected to generator.
โMar-05-2022 04:25 PM
โMar-05-2022 03:46 PM
โMar-05-2022 02:15 PM
JRscooby wrote:BB_TX wrote:theoldwizard1 wrote:Allworth wrote:
GFI needs a hard ground.
Not true !
GFI works by measuring the current flowing in and the current flowing out. It trips if they are not equal.
GFI can be used in old houses with no grounds (requires that the outlet be labeled as not grounded).
This is correct. However, there must be some ground path back to the power source for the GFCI to be able to have a discrepancy between the current in the hot pin vs the current in the neutral pin. The GFCI works on the principle that that there is some current "leaking" out of the circuit. For there to be any current flowing outside the circuit in question, there must be some path for that current to flow back to the source. Electricity requires a closed path to flow. If that path does not exist, then current can not "leak" out of the circuit. In old ungrounded homes, that ground could be plumbing at the various sources of water.
That "leak" the GFI is detecting is what is running up your arm on it's way to ground. For decades, normal house wiring was only 2 conductors to outlet or lamp. There was no path to the water pipe for most uses.
โMar-05-2022 12:52 PM
JRscooby wrote:BB_TX wrote:theoldwizard1 wrote:Allworth wrote:
GFI needs a hard ground.
Not true !
GFI works by measuring the current flowing in and the current flowing out. It trips if they are not equal.
GFI can be used in old houses with no grounds (requires that the outlet be labeled as not grounded).
This is correct. However, there must be some ground path back to the power source for the GFCI to be able to have a discrepancy between the current in the hot pin vs the current in the neutral pin. The GFCI works on the principle that that there is some current "leaking" out of the circuit. For there to be any current flowing outside the circuit in question, there must be some path for that current to flow back to the source. Electricity requires a closed path to flow. If that path does not exist, then current can not "leak" out of the circuit. In old ungrounded homes, that ground could be plumbing at the various sources of water.
That "leak" the GFI is detecting is what is running up your arm on it's way to ground. For decades, normal house wiring was only 2 conductors to outlet or lamp. There was no path to the water pipe for most uses.
โMar-05-2022 12:02 PM
BB_TX wrote:theoldwizard1 wrote:Allworth wrote:
GFI needs a hard ground.
Not true !
GFI works by measuring the current flowing in and the current flowing out. It trips if they are not equal.
GFI can be used in old houses with no grounds (requires that the outlet be labeled as not grounded).
This is correct. However, there must be some ground path back to the power source for the GFCI to be able to have a discrepancy between the current in the hot pin vs the current in the neutral pin. The GFCI works on the principle that that there is some current "leaking" out of the circuit. For there to be any current flowing outside the circuit in question, there must be some path for that current to flow back to the source. Electricity requires a closed path to flow. If that path does not exist, then current can not "leak" out of the circuit. In old ungrounded homes, that ground could be plumbing at the various sources of water.
โMar-05-2022 07:27 AM
theoldwizard1 wrote:Allworth wrote:
GFI needs a hard ground.
Not true !
GFI works by measuring the current flowing in and the current flowing out. It trips if they are not equal.
GFI can be used in old houses with no grounds (requires that the outlet be labeled as not grounded).
โMar-05-2022 02:21 AM
Allworth wrote:
GFI needs a hard ground.
โMar-04-2022 05:44 PM
Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow
โMar-04-2022 05:05 PM
โMar-04-2022 04:51 PM
โMar-04-2022 11:49 AM
Allworth wrote:
GFI needs a hard ground.
Generator power is a floating ground. You are grounded to the generator, not the power grid.