โMar-24-2019 04:18 PM
โApr-01-2019 09:08 PM
โApr-01-2019 06:06 PM
โMar-30-2019 11:01 AM
โMar-30-2019 10:51 AM
road-runner wrote:
I've discovered the secret factory wiring instructions for these generators:
"Hook up the wires any way you want to get power between the hot and neutral connections on every power outlet. If there are any wire ends left over, just connect them anywhere that looks good"
Seriously, this is not a difficult detective process. With the bonding plug in the 20A duplex outlet, the other half of the outlet should show full voltage between hot and ground. Next step, check for voltage between hot and ground on the twistlock outlet (without adapter). If ok, proceed to next step, if not ok, the ground connection between the two outlets is bad. Next, test for voltage between hot on either outlet to chassis ground. If ok, proceed to next step. If not ok, the outlet grounds are not connected to chassis ground. Next, using the adapter in the twistlock outlet, check for voltage between hot and ground. If it's there, you're good to go. If it's not there, the ground connection in the adapter is bad.
For myself, I'd rather do this using the ohmmeter with the generator not running, but the voltage check should work just as well. Just don't be fooled by a partial voltage reading, all of them need to be the full voltage that's initially read from the 20A outlet.
โMar-30-2019 10:45 AM
wnjj wrote:
Use ohms with the generator off and bonding plug out to see if the ground pins are connected between the receptacles and the ground bolt on the right.
Since your EMS used to say hot/neutral swapped when bonded, I suspect itโll be fine now if all you did was swap white & black. The only way it knows about a reversal is if the ground is connected on both the bonded and plugged in receptacles. Now if a striped wire was loose and now off, thatโs another matter.
โMar-30-2019 09:54 AM
โMar-30-2019 06:40 AM
Bobbo wrote:
If your EMS is not saying "open ground" then it is detecting 120v between hot and ground. Since it is detecting 120v between hot and ground, your outlets should all have 120v between hot and ground. If they do not, you have a deeper problem. Somewhere between your outlets and the EMS, the ground wire is broken.
โMar-29-2019 08:24 PM
โMar-29-2019 09:54 AM
TheHound wrote:wnjj wrote:TheHound wrote:wnjj wrote:
Looks great. Hopefully there's enough slack to do that.
Your sir are a ***bleeping*** genius lol!
SUCCESS!
This has been quite the learning process and I thank everyone that has piped in so far ๐ But one more question, sorry.
I noticed now I am getting voltage readings on all receptacles ONLY between hot and neutral. I thought I should also see it between hot and ground. :? Which is correct? Cheers! -Frank
Excellent! Good work getting in there and getting your fingers dirty.
The ground on your generator is only connected between the ground pins of the receptacles, the ground lug and possibly any metal in the chassis. Until you plug your bonding plug it, there will be no potential between it and anything else. After bonding it you should see 120V between ground and hot on all receptacles.
Thanks wnjj, hopefully not...but I am pretty sure I checked voltage with the bonding plug inserted and still saw one reading on all 3 receptacles (hot & neutral). At work now but will double check to be sure when I get home. If that is indeed the case, do I need to do something with the striped yellow/green wire? Cheers!
โMar-29-2019 09:19 AM
wnjj wrote:TheHound wrote:wnjj wrote:
Looks great. Hopefully there's enough slack to do that.
Your sir are a ***bleeping*** genius lol!
SUCCESS!
This has been quite the learning process and I thank everyone that has piped in so far ๐ But one more question, sorry.
I noticed now I am getting voltage readings on all receptacles ONLY between hot and neutral. I thought I should also see it between hot and ground. :? Which is correct? Cheers! -Frank
Excellent! Good work getting in there and getting your fingers dirty.
The ground on your generator is only connected between the ground pins of the receptacles, the ground lug and possibly any metal in the chassis. Until you plug your bonding plug it, there will be no potential between it and anything else. After bonding it you should see 120V between ground and hot on all receptacles.
โMar-29-2019 09:06 AM
TheHound wrote:wnjj wrote:
Looks great. Hopefully there's enough slack to do that.
Your sir are a ***bleeping*** genius lol!
SUCCESS!
This has been quite the learning process and I thank everyone that has piped in so far ๐ But one more question, sorry.
I noticed now I am getting voltage readings on all receptacles ONLY between hot and neutral. I thought I should also see it between hot and ground. :? Which is correct? Cheers! -Frank
โMar-29-2019 08:44 AM
wnjj wrote:
Looks great. Hopefully there's enough slack to do that.
โMar-29-2019 08:18 AM
road-runner wrote:
Hound, nothing personal if you ignore this post as a distraction. When I get involved in a mystery like this I like to thoroughly understand what's happening. In the wiring diagram the connections to the hour meter aren't particularly logical. It has 6 wires going to it: 2 from a generator aux winding, 2 carrying AC power from the inverter, and 2 feeding the 20 amp outlet (but not the 30 amp outlet). A bit of the illogic is removed upon discovering that what the diagram calls an hour meter isn't an hour meter, but a multi function meter. The manual conveniently doesn't say what the functions are, but (to the rescue) the sales material says it displays output voltage, frequency, engine RPM, and run time. Now the connection to the aux winding makes sense because that's where the engine RPM is derived from. Instead of routing the inverter output through the meter module, as shown in the diagram, it appears that they're going straight from the inverter to the outlets (both 20 and 30 amp), and feeding the AC back to the meter module over the 2 small green wires, providing the voltage and frequency information. The run time info and power for the module could come from either the aux winding or AC output. If there's only 1 red and 1 white wire going to the hour meter, that would be the wires from the aux winding. If there's more then one red or one white, it's beyond my ability to guess without more info.
โMar-28-2019 08:39 PM