shepelec
Senior Member
- Location
- Palmer, MA
Some genny manufacturers offer a neutral isolation kit. This would allow you to remove the neutral/ ground jumper on the generator and still keep the UL listing intact.
Was this generator frame bonded to neutral within the generator? If not I don't see where the fault current will flow to trip the GFCI. The monitoring CT of that GFCI device will see no imbalance unless something returns outside the monitoring CT. If there is no frame to neutral bond that is impossible unless something is damaged in the generator and a path is developed, which as far as I can see that is all the GFCI is going to protect you from. Otherwise it should never trip unless there is a problem between the GFCI and the generator windings. The frame can possibly be same potential of any conductor of the system if there is a fault, but no fault current flows until there is a second fault somewhere, that is just the nature of an ungrounded system.
What does the kit consist of? Maybe the necessary tools needed to remove the bonding jumper?Some genny manufacturers offer a neutral isolation kit. This would allow you to remove the neutral/ ground jumper on the generator and still keep the UL listing intact.
What does the kit consist of? Maybe the necessary tools needed to remove the bonding jumper?
What does the kit consist of? Maybe the necessary tools needed to remove the bonding jumper?
I agree, to keep the UL listing intact, change the transfer switch to one that also switches the neutral.
During a recent power outage a client contacted us claiming his 8kw generator w/ gfci protection was going into fault while he attempted to connect it to his 30 amp inlet to power his transfer switch.I suggested that we isolate the grounding conductor from the neutral which were under one terminal and drive a ground rod and connect a #6 cu. wire to it. Any comments. Thanks
That is right way. In the event of a fault we expect the fault current to go back to source which at the moment is the 8KW generator. It has to have an N- G jumper which has to have a ground rod for system stability. It should be separately derived.