Eddie702
Licensed Electrician
- Location
- Western Massachusetts
- Occupation
- Electrician
I had this question asked of me this morning. My cousin has a van they use for camping. It can be plugged in at an RV park and when that is the case the receptacles in the van are grounded 3 prong receptacles which the ground pin is grounded by the EGC that they are plugged into and everything is fine.
He also has a battery and an inverter they can use to power the receptacles when they are stand alone or not plugged into a power supply. He happened to plug in his receptacle tester, and it shows open ground at the receptacle and with a meter hot to ground is like 30 volts while running on the inverter
This got me wondering as I have a tiny inverter in my truck that plugs into the cig lighter, and I use the inverter which has 3 wire receptacles to charge tool batteries etc
I would assume that the receptacle ground pin should be connected to the vehicle chassis but maybe I am wrong.
What should be done in this situation? Feed it with a GFCI receptacle?? Or is there supposed to be a N-G bond?
He also has a battery and an inverter they can use to power the receptacles when they are stand alone or not plugged into a power supply. He happened to plug in his receptacle tester, and it shows open ground at the receptacle and with a meter hot to ground is like 30 volts while running on the inverter
This got me wondering as I have a tiny inverter in my truck that plugs into the cig lighter, and I use the inverter which has 3 wire receptacles to charge tool batteries etc
I would assume that the receptacle ground pin should be connected to the vehicle chassis but maybe I am wrong.
What should be done in this situation? Feed it with a GFCI receptacle?? Or is there supposed to be a N-G bond?