โJul-30-2013 11:31 AM
โAug-24-2013 03:34 PM
Herb40 wrote:VintageRacer wrote:
Make sure your sub panel does not have neutral bonded to ground. It must separate neutral and ground, the transfer switch must switch both neutral and hot to the inverter, which must bond neutral and ground. Neutral is always bonded to ground at one point only, and that is the source of the power. Remember that GFCI - ground fault circuit interrupter - is a bit of a misnomer. The device does nothing with ground at all and can be installed in a circuit that does not have ground (such is code-allowed for protecting old 2 conductor wiring in old houses). It does trip if there is any difference between the current flowing in the hot conductor and the current flowing in the neutral conductor. Having neutral bonded in two places can create such a difference.
Brian
Brian, my Todd PS250 ATS in our Beaver Monterey is 17 years old. It still works, but the shore power contactor in it looks slightly off-color (burned?) on the outer plastic. I am considering replacing the PS250 with a manual transfer switch. But the manual transfer switches I've found switch only the hot wires, not the neutral. According to what you've written above, it wouldn't be acceptable if I were to simply connect all of the neutrals together (shore, generator, output). What's the deal here? Why does the neutral have to be switched?
โAug-23-2013 05:35 PM
VintageRacer wrote:
Make sure your sub panel does not have neutral bonded to ground. It must separate neutral and ground, the transfer switch must switch both neutral and hot to the inverter, which must bond neutral and ground. Neutral is always bonded to ground at one point only, and that is the source of the power. Remember that GFCI - ground fault circuit interrupter - is a bit of a misnomer. The device does nothing with ground at all and can be installed in a circuit that does not have ground (such is code-allowed for protecting old 2 conductor wiring in old houses). It does trip if there is any difference between the current flowing in the hot conductor and the current flowing in the neutral conductor. Having neutral bonded in two places can create such a difference.
Brian
โAug-13-2013 10:00 PM
โAug-13-2013 06:55 PM
โAug-13-2013 01:13 PM
BigFly10 wrote:pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
Seeing as the GFI is part of the inverter changing to another would be--hard.
I've occasional had my inverter fail over when attempting to run the microwave. The work around for me was to place a small load on the inverter to "wake it up". The fridge works well for this at 300 watts.
It is interesting you say this because, as mentioned in my testing, when I run my fridge in the rear of the TT before the microwave, it doesn't trip the GFI. I usually don't run this fridge off the inverter though and I would prefer not to turn it on each time I want to run the microwave.
โAug-13-2013 12:47 PM
BigFly10 wrote:3 tons wrote:
Upon re-read,
"The other cable to the ATS comes from a 30-amp breaker in the main breaker panel. At the main breaker panel, the cable going to the ATS has positive terminated on the breaker outlet, neutral on the neutral bar, and ground on the ground bar."
Since your ATS switch receives it's A/C input from the main panel, your problem may be one of competing 'circular currents' causing the sensitive inverter GFI outlet to trip. Try powering the ATS from ahead of the main panel (where shore power first enters coach), not after (then divide entrance (in parallel) to main panel & ATS), and you should see a difference, problem corrected...
Best Regards,
3 tons
I seriously considered wiring the system as you suggest when I set it up, however, I was concerned about how to limit the incoming current to the allowable 30 amps. If I tied off before the main breaker, then I could potentially be supplying up to 30 amps to the main breaker in addition to whatever the maximum is that could also be going to the ATS or sub-panel. It means that I would have to install an additional current limiting device upstream of where my parallel branch starts. To me it seemed easier just to use one of the empty slots in the main panel and then supply the sub-panel from the main panel.
Regardless, what you say makes sense and I may end up going this route if nothing else solves the problem. Thank you for the suggestion.
โAug-13-2013 12:40 PM
โAug-13-2013 12:36 PM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
Seeing as the GFI is part of the inverter changing to another would be--hard.
I've occasional had my inverter fail over when attempting to run the microwave. The work around for me was to place a small load on the inverter to "wake it up". The fridge works well for this at 300 watts.
โAug-13-2013 12:33 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
"Actually, Ground Fault is correct terminology. It means that there is a fault to TO ground, ie a fault between one of the current carrying wires and ground, allowing some current to flow directly to ground rather than through the neutral."
GCFI's are S-E-N-S-I-T-I-V-E
If more than a PREDETERMINED amount of current chooses to go to earth rather than negative it will fault the device. It absolutely does not have to be even close to 1/100th the amount of current going to neutral. This is a THRESHOLD grade problem and if you allow it to it will drive you nuts - for no reason IMHO.
A different BRAND of GCFI can cure this problem or "tuning" the feeder circuit like you are doing.
โAug-13-2013 12:28 PM
shooted wrote:
Is there no way of distinguishing between a ground fault or overload condition on this inverter? An overload condition is starting to make more sense than a ground fault condition
Edit
I now see the inverter has a standard gfci output, which when trips should easily be distinguishable from O/L condition.
On a different note, the inverter is limited to 15 amps, not 20 from my reading of the manual.
At this point I would have to agree with Mexs take on this.
โAug-13-2013 12:19 PM
3 tons wrote:
Upon re-read,
"The other cable to the ATS comes from a 30-amp breaker in the main breaker panel. At the main breaker panel, the cable going to the ATS has positive terminated on the breaker outlet, neutral on the neutral bar, and ground on the ground bar."
Since your ATS switch receives it's A/C input from the main panel, your problem may be one of competing 'circular currents' causing the sensitive inverter GFI outlet to trip. Try powering the ATS from ahead of the main panel (where shore power first enters coach), not after (then divide entrance (in parallel) to main panel & ATS), and you should see a difference, problem corrected...
Best Regards,
3 tons
โAug-13-2013 12:09 PM
โAug-13-2013 10:25 AM
โAug-13-2013 10:11 AM
BigFly10 wrote:john&bet wrote:
One point that none have touched on is that you may be overloading your gfi. Is it a 20amp gfi or a 15 amp? There was a time that the school of thought was not to plug a microwave into a gfi even in your home. Not sure if that still holds true. I wonder why your inverter even has GFI output on it for your application?
It is a 20 amp GFI so I don't think it is overloading the GFI. No idea why the inverter would have come with a GFI on its output (I sure wish it didn't) - the instructions clearly state that it is to be mounted in a dry area indoors.