rogerthebodger
Well-Known Member
The whole point of an isolation transformer is to isolate the legs of the supply so they are both floating WRT earth. Then the only way you can get a shock is by bridging both conductors with your body. If you connect one of these to your local earth, you are effectively removing that safeguard.
If the diagram showed the L wire connected to the E, you would all be saying it was crazy. In fact it makes no difference.
What you have defined is a floating system and is used in some countries. The US is one I think but the supply voltage in most domestic case is 110 VCD
That is not the system in the UK it is the E/N unbalanced system. In fact it is the E/N connection that defines the neutral so connecting the "line" to Earth now makes it neutral so if you connected both sides if supply to earth you would have a very big bang.
The point of having an IT is to not have an electrical connection between the boat and supply but only have a magnetic through only AC power can flow so no DC. If you want a balances system, the type used on building sites is to have a centre tap IT and a person is only exposed to half the supply voltage but again in this set up the RCD would not work.
In you view if there was a short to equipment case of the live connector in a balances system what would happen and if there was no danger how would you know that there was an internal short inside the equipment.