Graham_Wright
Well-Known Member
Well, it can be. It can also be TT or TN-S.
Pete
I explained PME!
TT=?
TN-S=?
Well, it can be. It can also be TT or TN-S.
Pete
I explained PME!
TT=?
TN-S=?
I explained PME!
TT=?
TN-S=?
when a person touches the live wire thus creating an imbalance, regardless of whether there's a physical earth wire anywhere in the circuit.
If I use a plug-in RCD in my generator cable, it works although the generator itself and the lead do not have any earth connections.
If I am seriously sorting something on the work bench at 240V, I use a mains isolating transformer 240/240 with no earth connection on the secondary. I can touch live and chassis or neutral and chassis of the equipment and not get a shock, if an Rcd was in circuit I doubt it would trip. If I touch Live and neutral in the equipment I will still get a shock and would (I believe) if there was an RCD in circuit and I doubt it would trip.
I ask again how does that imbalance get back to the supply and it just cannot disappear into thin air or the earth. It must go somewhere.
Don't know what kind of "plug-in" RCD you use but again the imbalanced current must get back to the generator circuit bypassing the RCD.
It's based on a fundamental law of electrical current flow.
In this case Davidpbo is creating what you say would trip the RCD but it doesn't
If it does in your case you have a setup different to what you think you have.
An rcd will trip if there is a current flow to earth through you.
It wont trip if you touch a live conductor while standing on a dry non-conducting floor or wearing your industrial safety shoes because there is no effective path to earth.
If however you are standing in a typical rain soaked English boat yard wearing non protecting foot wear it will trip because it has detected an imbalance due to the current flowing to earth though you. Current that would electrocute you but for the RCD
Touching live and neutral simultaneously, while you are insulated from earth, can electrocute you without tripping the RCD.... because there is no imbalance between the current in the live and neutral conductors.
There is Bearing in mind that, e.g., the French don't really understand (!) earths or polarity, connecting your earth and neutral together could be "interesting" if the shore supply is reversed.
I think you misunderstand me... I have earth and neutral connected in the lead that I use to connect my generator to the shore power inlet. I also stressed that you should not use this lead to connect to the shore supply.
The OP asked about earthing the generator... By default, one might assume that there is no connection to a shore supply.
The very important thing is not to use the lead with earth and neutral connected to connect the boat to a shore supply!!!
Before making up a lead with neutral and earth connected I would check the generator to see if this is already done internally. IIRC the small Hondas have this connection internally, even if Roger's larger Honda does not
I have one of those 3 pin plug type circuit testers, (various combinations of 3 lights show the fault). Mine showed no earth with generator connected, earth OK on shore supply. After much deliberation and delay, (possibly a year or so), I connected the earth and neutral in the genny lead, and the tester showed earth OK.
As I said, I don't understand these things, but after a bit of deduction, it seemed to make sense.
I agree that you should test for an earth fault before doing anything.
Interestingly, I have noted that, when working on a mains circuit with the live not connected, an earth neutral short will trip the breaker. I guess the neutral must float up sufficiently for there to be a pd between it and earth due to other circuits.
Okay, I'm just about to make myself a lead, specifically for the generator to boat supply. At the plug which goes into the generator I have to connect both the neutral and earth together. To which pin please, the neutral pin or the earth pin? I presume that I needn't make any change to the plug on the other end which connects to the boat. I've never thought of myself as a thick , but I must be! Thanks. Alan
If you connect to both neutral and earth in the normal way and also link them in the plug the generator chassis and earth terminal will be connected to the boats internal "earth" wiring.
I'd do this.
I have a 5kVA 240V generator with an external earth stud (not connected to the ground or a spike) and it gets plugged into the yacht's shore power via a home made crossover lead 3 x Pin domestic to 3 Pin caravan style plug round pin wired up normally i.e. L, N, E. The generator is a mass market type that you see sold at Machine Mart, mines is a bit older than the current models, so nothing fancy. Can you confirm my understanding please: -
1. At the moment the RCD in my yacht mains ring circuit (professionally installed) will not work because it can't sense the required voltage difference if there is a fault. This is a dangerous condition because I could get an electric shock and would not be protected by the RCD.
2. For the RCD to work, I need to connect the earth and neutral pins with a short length of insulated wire in one of the plugs of my home made cross over cable.
If I am wrong please just say so and there is no need to explain it all again in the thread. I will then seek professional help.
Thanks,
BlowingOldBoots
1. At the moment the RCD in my yacht mains ring circuit (professionally installed) will not work because it can't sense the required voltage difference if there is a fault. T
2. For the RCD to work, I need to connect the earth and neutral pins with a short length of insulated wire in one of the plugs of my home made cross over cable.
BlowingOldBoots
As a matter of interest, how do you know the RCD isn't working? If it doesn't trip when you press the test button, that would indicate a faulty RCD as it doesn't need an earth to work.
http://www.electriciansforums.co.uk...gulations/38819-yet-another-rcd-question.html
It does work, I test it every time I power up the genny but I have no idea what the test button does: does it replicate a fault, or just verifies that trigger will release the switch.