โApr-29-2017 08:55 AM
โApr-30-2017 12:46 PM
โApr-29-2017 08:07 PM
โApr-29-2017 07:34 PM
โApr-29-2017 06:57 PM
bikendan wrote:
Don't understand why someone uses a surge protector with a 3000w or less generator.Am I missing something?
2oldman wrote:
Perhaps it's hard-wired in. Or it's one of those belt- and -suspenders things, like holding the gas nozzle instead of trusting it to shut itself off.
โApr-29-2017 04:26 PM
naturist wrote:
My two generators, a 5500 watt Generac open frame and an 1800 watt ETQ inverter generator both have ground lugs and both say to ground them for safety sake. I seldom do this, and my take on it is hardly anyone else ever does it. But I'll bet that doing so would also solve the issue.
The Generac is for home use, and I drove an extra 8 foot ground rod into the ground next to where that generator would sit when using it to power the house in the event of an outage. But I note that one can as easily get a good ground the old fashioned way: with a battery clamp on a water faucet that has metal pipes.
โApr-29-2017 04:16 PM
โApr-29-2017 02:55 PM
โApr-29-2017 01:12 PM
bikendan wrote:
Don't understand why someone uses a surge protector with a 3000w or less generator.
Am I missing something?
โApr-29-2017 12:54 PM
bikendan wrote:Perhaps it's hard-wired in. Or it's one of those belt- and -suspenders things, like holding the gas nozzle instead of trusting it to shut itself off.
Don't understand why someone uses a surge protector with a 3000w or less generator.Am I missing something?
โApr-29-2017 12:52 PM
โApr-29-2017 10:37 AM
enblethen wrote:
The genset does not have a connection between the neutral and ground. This is common. You need to make a dummy plug that ties the neutral and ground together. This will lie to the Surge Guard.
โApr-29-2017 09:34 AM
Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow
โApr-29-2017 08:58 AM