โJul-21-2013 05:34 PM
โJul-24-2013 06:39 PM
โJul-24-2013 03:41 PM
โJul-24-2013 07:52 AM
Seattle Lion wrote:It is important that there is no neutral/ground bond in the trailer. Again, the only place the neutral should be bonded to the ground is at the campground service entrance. While some metered pedestals are treated as a service entrance and the bond is at the pedestal, it should never be bonded in the trailer.smkettner wrote:
Still, get the outlet tester. Still could be reverse polarity as there is no neutral ground bond in the RV.
If there is no neutral/ground bond in the RV, then GFI's wouldn't work. I think neutral in the camper should be connected at the power center to the incoming ground (not earth, the green ground wire on the 30 amp cord). A problem with this conductor going into your camper will let all AC "float", which can be hazardous if some stuff in the camper is not using polarized plugs. A quick way to test this is to look for voltage between neutral (white) and ground (green) at various points in your power chain.
This issue is one reason why it is important to check shore AC before plugging in.
โJul-23-2013 04:38 PM
smkettner wrote:
Still, get the outlet tester. Still could be reverse polarity as there is no neutral ground bond in the RV.
โJul-23-2013 02:43 PM
vermilye wrote:Nvr2loud wrote:JesLookin wrote:Nvr2loud wrote:24rules wrote:
I agree but if the trailer is properly grounded there would be no stray voltage to be felt since the frame is part of the ground
I just did some work on a melted neutral bar in my trailer and discovered that there is no ground to frame on the 120 volt side, only on the 12 volt side. The ground from shore power goes to the grounding bar and all the outlets ground wires go to that bar. The bar is isolated and there is no ground wire to frame anywhere that I can find, is this unusual? I can clearly see where the 12 volt ground goes to frame.
There should not be a connection between the neutral & ground in your trailer. The neutral & ground should be connected at the campground power supply. The trailer is an accessory plugged into the campground power. Just as there is no connection between ground & neutral for any appliance you plug in at home, such as heater, etc...
I know that already, my question was about the ground wire from shore power, in my trailer that ground wire DOES NOT connect to the trailer frame at any spot. The shore ground wire (120 VAC on 30 amp connection) simply goes to a ground bar and that bar is isolated from the trailer frame. My concern is creating a ground through a person from the trailer to ground.
Check in your converter. If it is wired to code, there should be a #6 wire connecting the converter ground to the trailer frame.
You can use an ohm meter to check - it there really is no connection between the ground buss & the trailer frame, there should be. Without one, you have a shock hazard waiting to happen.
โJul-23-2013 02:38 PM
john&bet wrote:Nvr2loud wrote:There was a dead short between the to hot wires of a 50 amp service in the romex in the trailer that tripped a 50 amp 2 pole pedestal c/b and would not trip a 30 amp shore c/b plain and simple that is a short. That does not take a meter to find. You just have to start digging into the trailer. Enough said. Thank you and have a good day.john&bet wrote:wittmeba wrote:I did. I have a $300. tester and know how to use it. This is what makes trouble shooting hard from a distance. Have a good day.
john&bet,
Not trying to argue but who put the label on your problem as a "short"? I think the term "short" is used when describing an electrical condition that may not be fully understood or easy to explain.
I would agree with BB_TX as a short is a condition where a line is directly touching a neutral or ground. That almost (if not always) should trip a breaker. It is different than a situation where the line and neutral are swapped (happens with 2 wire extension cords) which is likely what the OP has indicated.
This condition seems to appear weekly or more on this forum.
The plugin tester is $5.00 at Walmart.
I don't care if you have a $300.00 tester and 'know how to use it' you still did not have a short.
โJul-23-2013 02:14 PM
Nvr2loud wrote:There was a dead short between the to hot wires of a 50 amp service in the romex in the trailer that tripped a 50 amp 2 pole pedestal c/b and would not trip a 30 amp shore c/b plain and simple that is a short. That does not take a meter to find. You just have to start digging into the trailer. Enough said. Thank you and have a good day.john&bet wrote:wittmeba wrote:I did. I have a $300. tester and know how to use it. This is what makes trouble shooting hard from a distance. Have a good day.
john&bet,
Not trying to argue but who put the label on your problem as a "short"? I think the term "short" is used when describing an electrical condition that may not be fully understood or easy to explain.
I would agree with BB_TX as a short is a condition where a line is directly touching a neutral or ground. That almost (if not always) should trip a breaker. It is different than a situation where the line and neutral are swapped (happens with 2 wire extension cords) which is likely what the OP has indicated.
This condition seems to appear weekly or more on this forum.
The plugin tester is $5.00 at Walmart.
I don't care if you have a $300.00 tester and 'know how to use it' you still did not have a short.
โJul-23-2013 01:40 PM
Nvr2loud wrote:JesLookin wrote:Nvr2loud wrote:24rules wrote:
I agree but if the trailer is properly grounded there would be no stray voltage to be felt since the frame is part of the ground
I just did some work on a melted neutral bar in my trailer and discovered that there is no ground to frame on the 120 volt side, only on the 12 volt side. The ground from shore power goes to the grounding bar and all the outlets ground wires go to that bar. The bar is isolated and there is no ground wire to frame anywhere that I can find, is this unusual? I can clearly see where the 12 volt ground goes to frame.
There should not be a connection between the neutral & ground in your trailer. The neutral & ground should be connected at the campground power supply. The trailer is an accessory plugged into the campground power. Just as there is no connection between ground & neutral for any appliance you plug in at home, such as heater, etc...
I know that already, my question was about the ground wire from shore power, in my trailer that ground wire DOES NOT connect to the trailer frame at any spot. The shore ground wire (120 VAC on 30 amp connection) simply goes to a ground bar and that bar is isolated from the trailer frame. My concern is creating a ground through a person from the trailer to ground.
โJul-23-2013 12:50 PM
john&bet wrote:wittmeba wrote:I did. I have a $300. tester and know how to use it. This is what makes trouble shooting hard from a distance. Have a good day.
john&bet,
Not trying to argue but who put the label on your problem as a "short"? I think the term "short" is used when describing an electrical condition that may not be fully understood or easy to explain.
I would agree with BB_TX as a short is a condition where a line is directly touching a neutral or ground. That almost (if not always) should trip a breaker. It is different than a situation where the line and neutral are swapped (happens with 2 wire extension cords) which is likely what the OP has indicated.
This condition seems to appear weekly or more on this forum.
The plugin tester is $5.00 at Walmart.
โJul-23-2013 12:48 PM
JesLookin wrote:Nvr2loud wrote:24rules wrote:
I agree but if the trailer is properly grounded there would be no stray voltage to be felt since the frame is part of the ground
I just did some work on a melted neutral bar in my trailer and discovered that there is no ground to frame on the 120 volt side, only on the 12 volt side. The ground from shore power goes to the grounding bar and all the outlets ground wires go to that bar. The bar is isolated and there is no ground wire to frame anywhere that I can find, is this unusual? I can clearly see where the 12 volt ground goes to frame.
There should not be a connection between the neutral & ground in your trailer. The neutral & ground should be connected at the campground power supply. The trailer is an accessory plugged into the campground power. Just as there is no connection between ground & neutral for any appliance you plug in at home, such as heater, etc...
โJul-23-2013 10:23 AM
BroncoAl wrote:If it doesn't trip a GFCI & you are no longer getting a shock from the trailer I wouldn't worry about it. It could be a very high resistance fault, for example capacitive coupling, etc that doesn't produce enough current to cause a problem. If you still want to chase it down, measure the ground current while switching off each breaker.
It's plugged into a 20A GFI breaker on the front porch with an adapter to the 30A cord. How do I go about trouble shooting the problem if there is no obvious problem?
โJul-23-2013 08:35 AM
wittmeba wrote:I did. I have a $300. tester and know how to use it. This is what makes trouble shooting hard from a distance. Have a good day.
john&bet,
Not trying to argue but who put the label on your problem as a "short"? I think the term "short" is used when describing an electrical condition that may not be fully understood or easy to explain.
I would agree with BB_TX as a short is a condition where a line is directly touching a neutral or ground. That almost (if not always) should trip a breaker. It is different than a situation where the line and neutral are swapped (happens with 2 wire extension cords) which is likely what the OP has indicated.
This condition seems to appear weekly or more on this forum.
The plugin tester is $5.00 at Walmart.
โJul-23-2013 07:42 AM
Nvr2loud wrote:24rules wrote:
I agree but if the trailer is properly grounded there would be no stray voltage to be felt since the frame is part of the ground
I just did some work on a melted neutral bar in my trailer and discovered that there is no ground to frame on the 120 volt side, only on the 12 volt side. The ground from shore power goes to the grounding bar and all the outlets ground wires go to that bar. The bar is isolated and there is no ground wire to frame anywhere that I can find, is this unusual? I can clearly see where the 12 volt ground goes to frame.
โJul-23-2013 07:23 AM
24rules wrote:
I agree but if the trailer is properly grounded there would be no stray voltage to be felt since the frame is part of the ground