โSep-05-2019 03:12 PM
โSep-08-2019 11:48 AM
road-runner wrote:
Another possibility, and I'm not saying I think this is the cause, is something I could see myself doing. That's using a stranded wire for making the bond, and having one wayward strand touching the hot terminal inside the plug housing. That strand would likely go up in smoke without shutting down the generator output.
โSep-06-2019 05:53 PM
BFL13 wrote:
There is a duplex 15a receptacle and a 30a twist type. You used your bonded plug in one of the two 15a? but the 30a was occupied by whatever.
Ok, in a recent thread, it came out that there is something going on between the 15 and the 30 so they are not all the same wiring, so what you got was as though before you do all that needed work with the wiring in behind there, so when you bond a 15, it does not screw up the 30 --or whatever that was all about. ( It was complicated!)
โSep-06-2019 04:59 PM
โSep-06-2019 01:45 PM
Jetstreamer wrote:Bobbo wrote:
Check polarity of 30 amp outlet against 15 amp outlet, e.g. "hot wire to hot wire" should show zero voltage. If it shows 120v they are wired reverse from each other and one of them should be changed.
Triple check the bonding plug.
This only makes sense if both:
1. 30 amp and 15 amp have reversed polarity from each other
and
2. something in your RV has a neutral/ground short
The reason this would explain the problem is the RV's neutral/ground short puts one leg of power on the ground wire (the leg that is hot on the other outlet). The bonding plug puts the other leg on the ground wire. That is a dead short between the two legs through the ground wire.
Thanks.. The plug is correct and Iโm just surprised that a breaker wouldnโt have tripped somewhere... Certainly could be something wired wrong...I doubt it from Honda itโs more likely that Iโm wired wrong.... when I get home Iโll do some further inspection...
โSep-06-2019 08:35 AM
Lynnmor wrote:
Are you sure that the generator was not already bonded?
SoundGuy wrote:
All Honda EU series inverter generators have a floating neutral.
Lynnmor wrote:
Where did it say "Honda"?
โSep-06-2019 07:12 AM
Lynnmor wrote:Subject.
Where did it say "Honda"?
โSep-06-2019 07:11 AM
SoundGuy wrote:Lynnmor wrote:
Are you sure that the generator was not already bonded?
All Honda EU series inverter generators have a floating neutral.
โSep-06-2019 06:57 AM
โSep-05-2019 07:49 PM
โSep-05-2019 07:27 PM
Bobbo wrote:
Check polarity of 30 amp outlet against 15 amp outlet, e.g. "hot wire to hot wire" should show zero voltage. If it shows 120v they are wired reverse from each other and one of them should be changed.
Triple check the bonding plug.
This only makes sense if both:
1. 30 amp and 15 amp have reversed polarity from each other
and
2. something in your RV has a neutral/ground short
The reason this would explain the problem is the RV's neutral/ground short puts one leg of power on the ground wire (the leg that is hot on the other outlet). The bonding plug puts the other leg on the ground wire. That is a dead short between the two legs through the ground wire.
โSep-05-2019 07:24 PM
Michelle.S wrote:
OK, let me understand: The Generator was running and then you plugged in your RV using the Neutral/Ground bonded plug? If that is correct, are you sure there wasn't something on in the RV that caused a surge of current when the plug made contact with the Generator outlet?
โSep-05-2019 07:15 PM
2oldman wrote:
Have no direct answer, but just wondering why you made this bonding plug..?
โSep-05-2019 06:30 PM
โSep-05-2019 05:53 PM