โAug-27-2018 08:59 AM
โAug-29-2018 01:00 PM
Optimistic Paranoid wrote:That's the best approach. Let people know the pros and cons, then they can decide which risk they'd rather be exposed to. The fear of spoiled food is why (I assume) that the NEC has had a GFCI exemption for outlets powering refrigeration devices. This exemption, however, has been watered down in the last few NEC versions. For example, there's no longer a GFCI exemption for refrigerators in garages and unfinished basements. It wouldn't surprise me if new campground outlets are required to be GFCI protected in the not-too-distant future.
I can see both sides of this issue, so won't get into an argument over it.
โAug-29-2018 10:12 AM
DrewE wrote:
My fridge would just switch to propane.
โAug-29-2018 10:02 AM
Optimistic Paranoid wrote:DrewE wrote:
To be honest, I don't entirely understand why RV receptacles aren't required by the NEC to have GFCI protection.
I can think of several reasons why it wouldn't be a good idea.
Your motor home is plugged in to 50 or 30 amp service that has GFCI built in. You leave for the day in your toad and return late that evening to discover that the GFCI tripped shortly after you left, and your rig has been without power all day.
All the food in your refrigerator and/or freezer is now warm.
Your dinner, which was left in a slow cooker, is not only not cooked, but it's probably spoiled.
You left the A/C on because you left your dog/cat(s) in the motor home and rather than being safely cooled all day, they've been locked in an oven.
We wouldn't want our sticks & bricks to be on a master GFCI, we want the option of having some circuits, like to our furnace and our freezers to be on non-gfci circuits. The same logic applies to our mobile homes.
โAug-29-2018 07:47 AM
DrewE wrote:
To be honest, I don't entirely understand why RV receptacles aren't required by the NEC to have GFCI protection.
โAug-29-2018 07:47 AM
โAug-29-2018 07:25 AM
โAug-29-2018 07:11 AM
Optimistic Paranoid wrote:
Neither your Surgeguard, nor any of the testers you are using, will protect you from the kind of dangerous mis-wiring that will electrify the metal parts of your RV, called a 'hot skin condition'.
Go to YouTube, search on 'hot skin condition' and you will find several good videos explaining how this happens and how you can test for this potentially deadly - as in 'can kill you' - situation.
โAug-29-2018 03:47 AM
โAug-28-2018 05:54 PM
โAug-28-2018 03:35 PM
โAug-28-2018 12:21 PM
BFL13 wrote:
Would a "surge guard" have saved the RV in those same situations? mine (Model 44740RV RV30)also has "Shockshield", which is a sort of GFCI near as I can tell from the (vague) instructions.
What does an EMS do that a surge guard doesn't?
โAug-28-2018 12:19 PM
โAug-28-2018 10:52 AM
โAug-28-2018 10:16 AM