โMay-10-2017 04:22 PM
HI,
Possibly you can help me with a technical question.
I have a Krieger 1100 watt inverter. I will be installing this in my rv travel trailer.
The travel trailer is basically a sub panel. So when I plug into the camp grounds pedestal I get the bond at the service entrance.
This would also stand true I assume for my 2800 watt gas generator. When I plug the RV to that I get the bond from the generator. This generator is bonded neutral/ground.
I notice your invertor has an open neutral from my test light. I will
be running a ground wire from the back of the unit to the trailers frame.
What I am going to do is essentially plug the RV into this invertor to power it. This will power all my outlets in the trailer. I will be turning off the charging circuit so there is no endless loop going on.
I am not sure if I should bond the N/G in the krieger invertor. I would plug a n/g plug into the extra outlet to accomplish this.
1. Should I leave this as an open neutral unit or make N/G plug to
bond the neutral and ground? ( Attached is an image of said plug) 2.
What gauge wire should run from grounding terminal in back of unit to
frame of trailer? ( I was going to use 6 gauge)
I hope you understand this and can help me.
Thanks
Mike NJ
HI Mike,
Thank you for the provided information about your application. We recommend using only the hot and neutral on the plug only and do not use the AC ground when connecting the inverter to a breaker panel box. You should use #10 gauge cable when connecting the ground chassis located on the back of the inverter to the frame of the trailer.
Customer Support
Krieger Manufacturing
2933 W. Cypress Creek Road, STE 202
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309
Tel: 1.954.603.4950
Ok just to be clear in laymans terms,
So you recommend just plugging the RV into the krieger inverters outlet, with no modification to the neutral/ground, even though it will show as open?
Yes I will use 10 gauge or better for the chassis ground.
Also would you be able to supply a schematic for this 1100 watt inverter?
Thank you for your time. Its much appreciated......
Regards
Mike NJ
The modified wave inverter shows an open or floating ground compared to power received from your AC wall outlets. This results in a incompatibility when connecting to a breaker panel box. The best way is to just use the hot and neutral legs on the inverter's AC outlet and do not use the ground connection when connecting to a breaker panel. We still recommend grounding the inverter by connecting the 10 AWG cable to the ground chassis terminal located on the back of the inverter. You can consult with a qualified electrician for proper installation if needed. We do not provide diagrams, schematics, or a parts list to any of our products due to proprietary reasons.
Customer Support
Krieger Manufacturing
2933 W. Cypress Creek Road, STE 202
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309
Tel: 1.954.603.4950
โJun-07-2017 11:38 AM
โJun-07-2017 10:41 AM
Yes, we are referring to the residential breaker box. However, since your RV's breaker panel box neutral and ground are not bonded together, you can plug the breaker panel box directly to the AC outlet on the inverter (as already setup and shown in your picture). Your setup appears good.
Customer Support
Krieger Manufacturing
cs@kriegermfg.com
-----Original Message-----
Sent: Saturday, June 3, 2017 9:56 PM
To: cs@kriegermfg.com
Subject: Re: Neutral ground bond
Hi customer support...
OK I got my inverter in and I just want to verify your statement about lifting the ground wire.
I know you stated incompatibility when connecting to a breaker box, but are you referring to a residential breaker box that has the ground/neutral bonded?
Just for reference I am plugging my RV into your inverter. RV breaker box's are not bonded. The grounds and neutrals are separate in any and all travel trailers.
With this new info does lifting the ground wire still apply?
Just a note:
The inverter works both ways. With the ground lifted and without the ground lifted.
I attached a pic of my set up. The ext cord I have plugged into the inverter goes through the floor and I installed a travel trailer 30 amp outlet under the trailer to plug in my travel trailer. In this plug is where I can lift the ground or not lift the ground.
I just want to be safe and make sure im doing the right thing with the ground wire..
Thanks for you help,
Mike L NJ.
โJun-01-2017 09:28 PM
MrWizard wrote:
open the back cover and unplug it, there is an outlet right there, the fridge is plugged into
โJun-01-2017 09:18 PM
โJun-01-2017 09:07 PM
time2roll wrote:lawrosa wrote:No button to designate propane only? My Dometic does right next to the on/off button.
The only issue I have is the fridge is automatic 120v/LP gas.
โJun-01-2017 09:05 PM
lawrosa wrote:No button to designate propane only? My Dometic does right next to the on/off button.
The only issue I have is the fridge is automatic 120v/LP gas.
โJun-01-2017 08:36 PM
โMay-11-2017 06:30 PM
โMay-11-2017 06:08 PM
BFL13 wrote:
...
Another inverter I was using had GFCI receptacles and chassis ground. When the shore power cord was plugged into the inverter it somehow found a neg path to the DC fuse panel. The shore cord is grounded to the frame at the Power Centre and so is the 12v side of things, so 120 and 12 share the frame as negative/ground. The inverter's chassis ground joined in with that
...
โMay-11-2017 08:39 AM
โMay-10-2017 11:36 PM
road-runner wrote:
With respect to the AC output, there are two types of MSW inverters. One type has a true floating output and can be bonded if you wish. Higher end MSW inverters tend to be of this type. The other type of output, common in lower-end MSW inverters, was described in DrewE's earlier post. Both output conductors are hot with respect to chassis ground. What happens when you bond either output depends on whether the inverter has output short circuit protection or not. If it has short circuit protection it simply will stop working. If it doesn't have the protection, it will instantly go up in smoke. Verified (accidentally) by personal experience.
โMay-10-2017 08:45 PM
โMay-10-2017 06:38 PM
MrWizard wrote:
My take on this
assumming you are talking about an inverter that has power pass thru to be used with shore or generator power
Ground the inverter case to frame ground
Do Not mess with the internal wiring
A bonding plug is only needed when you have some device that gives you an alert, and won't function
โMay-10-2017 06:29 PM