โMay-24-2015 10:17 AM
โMay-31-2015 07:16 AM
SoundGuy wrote:
FWIW I think I'm back to "square one" on this whole bonding issue. :S I read through the entire 41 pages of that 2008 / 2009 discussion on bonding and when none of the "experts" could agree I decided to just leave it as is for now as it seems to work just fine even with my Surge Guard in the circuit. The inverter's output I left un-bonded, simply wiring it's output to feed the trailer's main service cable, which also seems to work just fine with the SG in the circuit. The subject of using a GFCI on a genset output also came up in that discussion but again no one seemed to agree so for now I have bothered with that either. Maybe BFL13 was right when he said back on Page 1 of this discussion "Ignore the non-problem!"
โMay-30-2015 07:13 PM
โMay-30-2015 05:07 PM
โMay-30-2015 04:52 PM
BFL13 wrote:
The inverter's chassis ground must NOT be wired back to the inverter's neg input! It has to go to the frame on its own. They usually want about #8 AWG for that wire.
Vector inverter manual says the chassis ground is only for reducing RF interference for televisions etc, so no big deal
My Can Tire (I think I already posted this) 1000 PSW inverter chassis ground made a neg path from the shore cord's ground prong (plugged into the inverter) which by-passed my neg path (mostly frame) based battery disconnect switch, so I just did not use the chassis ground and all was well.
Small inverters like my "Source" (was Radio Shack) 400w, that I use now for "whole house" to make the receptacles live, with the shore cord into it, doesn't even have a chassis ground. It has no remote on/off either so I just leave it out front in the cargo bay, "on" all the time. The stand-by drain is tiny and being on solar you don't sweat the small stuff.
โMay-30-2015 04:45 PM
SoundGuy wrote:brulaz wrote:
By the way, SoundGuy,
how did you wire that wimpy little case ground post on the inverter. Separate wire to trailer chassis or just a jumper to the inverter's battery neg post (which winds up wired to chassis at the battery).
IIRC a separate wire to chassis is what's recommended?
Sorry I missed this earlier. :S
If you're referring to the inverter's owner's manual it's pretty bleak and says absolutely nothing about that "little case ground on the inverter" - no mention at all, doesn't even show it in pics, nada - so I didn't connect it at all. Further, on Page 4 it warns "Do not connect any AC device which has it's neutral connected to ground to the unit". By extension, that to me also means don't bond the inverter's output.
...
โMay-30-2015 04:39 PM
โMay-30-2015 04:05 PM
brulaz wrote:
By the way, SoundGuy,
how did you wire that wimpy little case ground post on the inverter. Separate wire to trailer chassis or just a jumper to the inverter's battery neg post (which winds up wired to chassis at the battery).
IIRC a separate wire to chassis is what's recommended?
โMay-29-2015 12:17 PM
road-runner wrote:
EMS as defined by Progressive Industries = Electrical Management System
"Progressive Industries Portable Electrical Management Systems (EMS) provide full RV protection against all adverse power conditions." , what is commonly called a "surge protector". It does not manage energy use.
EMS as defined by the rest of the world = Energy Management System, manages loads to keep circuits from overloading.
I believe the "open ground" discussion in this thread is related to the unfortunately named Progressive Industries EMS, which is really a "surge protector", another bad name for a power quality monitoring and protection device. Nothing to do with the other EMS, Energy Management System.
โMay-29-2015 12:16 PM
road-runner wrote:
EMS as defined by Progressive Industries = Electrical Management System
"Progressive Industries Portable Electrical Management Systems (EMS) provide full RV protection against all adverse power conditions." , what is commonly called a "surge protector". It does not manage energy use.
EMS as defined by the rest of the world = Energy Management System, manages loads to keep circuits from overloading.
I believe the "open ground" discussion in this thread is related to the unfortunately named Progressive Industries EMS, which is really a "surge protector", another bad name for a power quality monitoring and protection device. Nothing to do with the other EMS, Energy Management System.
โMay-29-2015 10:44 AM
โMay-29-2015 10:29 AM
โMay-29-2015 09:40 AM
โMay-29-2015 09:08 AM
โMay-29-2015 08:45 AM
IMO you are mis-interpreting the statement in the manual. Considering how many years this "open ground" issue has been around I think it's pretty lame that Progressive Ind does not directly address it. Back to opinion, if you place the bond at the inverter or generator, you are not touching the RV's electrical system, which is what the warning is about. You are bonding at the power source. The RV's electrical system ends at the shore power plug. Say you have 2 inverters or generators, one that's permanently bonded and the other where you added the bond yourself? What's the difference from the EMS's point-of-view?
Knew I'd seen reference to this issue somewhere. It was in the Prog Ind EMS manual.
They say in an RV you should "never bond the neutral and ground together for any reason". Bonding in an RV "will create a ground fault condition and may result in electrical shock and or fire hazard"
Pretty explicit; the neutral and ground should remain isolated in an RV, unlike a house.
So separate from whether the Inverter can deal with it, Prog Ind EMS explicitly says no.