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Tie neutral to ground on a gennie (generator)?
Posted by Rod Carbaugh on July 18, 2000
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Reply posted by Gene Pink on July 22, 2000
The guy who started this thread said they had fixed the problem
by grounding the distro from the gennie that they had lifted the
ground at the gennie.
The fellow that first brought up the problem with two gennies using
a common ground rod obviously had something wrong somewhere else
downstream of the gennies. Your answer to that was correct, but
then you replied again about it being wrong, under the assumption
that your electrician friend knows more than you do. I disagree,
you had it right the first time. This is where I jumped in, to challenge
the opinion of this electrician.
"The distro was at the stage. I would assume that this
would be perfectly safe, I don't know about legal, but they didn't
leave it ungrounded."
If I understand this premise, the ground rod was at the distro
instead of the usual place near the gennie? This is one way to do
it, sink the rod near the distro, bond the neutral and ground in
the distro instead of at the genny, and ground the frame of the
genny through the green wire in the feeder back to the distro/rod.
Techically this may well meet code if there is a main breaker either
coming into the distro or at the output of the gennie, not really
sure though, but in this case you would refer to your distro as
the service entrance, and watch the fire marshall scratch his head
trying to get the gist of it all. But I believe it is plenty safe.
In thinking about the original problem of breakers popping, perhaps
they were the ground fault type? If the neutral and ground are bonded
in more than one place, the voltage drop on the neutral will show
up as a voltage on the ground and trip them.
"I contacted my nephew who works for a company who does
the emergency gennies for office buildings, hospitals, etc., and
he said that the switch gear that transfers the power from the power
company to the generator automatically has the neutral from the
gennie and the neutral from the power company attached..."
I should hope so, a bad connection on a set of contacts used for
a neutral could over-voltage one of the legs and blow up a lot of
stuff in a building. There is no need to disconnect the neutrals
from each other.
Importance of connections:
Lose a ground, lose a life.
Lose a neutral, lose some gear.
Lose a leg, show stops, fix it, no harm done.
"The neutral is not switched. This would be the same ,
I would think, as two generators grounded to the same rod."
I'll buy that.
"Electrical items sure generate a lot of interest on this
forum. And we're supposed to be sound guys."
Does with me. :-)
"I did a generator job one time and the generator rental
guy told the promoter of the concert, don't worry about the generator,
the sound guy will know what to do, and he didn't know me, but he
knew sound guys."
Yeah, typical "pass the buck" bullshit, he just didn't
want to stick around, or maybe he didn't have a clue himself and
didn't want the responsibility. I highly doubt that every sound
company in existance has the knowlege to tie into a gennie, or even
a power box, safely. Just around here in the past few years, I know
of at least four tie ins that resulted in 208 on a leg, frying a
lot of gear. In half these cases, the people on site were quite
competent, they just didn't bother to meter it before they plugged
in.
I caught one myself a few months ago, a well respected but sometimes
careless employee that is pretty sharp with power was instructed
to run the feeder but not to tie in, I'll do that when I get over
there. I got there in the nick of time, he went ahead and tied in
and was about to throw the two-pole breaker, with the black and
white on the neutral/ground buss, and the red and green on the two
hots. Sonovabitch. His excuse: his maglite was about dead and the
green looked like the black.
I renewed my liability insurance the following Monday.
Gene
Reply posted by Weogo Reed on July 22, 2000
Hi Gene,
"In thinking about the original problem of breakers popping,
perhaps they were the ground fault type? If the neutral and ground
are bonded in more than one place, the voltage drop on the neutral
will show up as a voltage on the ground and trip them."
So with a properly wired PD and sound system, GFCIs can be a good
thing?
Are GFCIs best located at the breaker box or outlet?
I do know not to use the cheapo GFCIs.
Thanks and good health, Weogo
Reply posted by Gene Pink on July 23, 2000
An anal inspector that didn't get laid last night may well require
them on an outdoor show. I have nothing against them, but I don't
use them. It has been my experience that backline stage amps with
two prong power cords and three-position ground/power switch (center-off),
will relentlessly trip these things, due to a capacitor in the amps
that couples either leg to ground, ie, makes leakage current on
purpose if set the wrong way in relation to which way they are plugged
in. The original Fender Twin comes to mind.
A case of old technology and new technology not working together,
even though each is functioning as designed.
"Are GFCIs best located at the breaker box or outlet?
I do know not to use the cheapo GFCIs."
Good question, that I don't have an answer for. At the outlet,
you have to buy more of them than if you just got GFI breakers.
On the other hand, if each outlet is a GFI, it makes finding the
offending power leakage a lot faster, and won't leave other gear
wthout power if it goes.
A few words about GFI workings: They don't actually sense ground
current directly, they look at the current in the neutral and the
hot leg and compare the two. Both should be the same, anything that
goes out on the hot should come back on the neutral. If they are
not within a few milliamps of each other, they make the assumption
that some of the current is getting back to the neutral buss through
another path, possibly through your arms and legs to wet dirt, so
they trip. Perfect for residential kitchens and bathrooms around
water, but many false trips on stage. Some are more sensitive than
others, and can be prone to tripping way too early. (In my opinion.
A little tingle now and then is good for ya...) I hate having to
cross my fingers that the stage will stay powered until loadout.
Gene
Reply posted by D. Parker on July 22, 2000
"In thinking about the original problem of breakers popping,
perhaps they were the ground fault type?"
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I had considered this possibility.
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In half these cases, the people on site were quite competent, they
just didn't bother to meter it before they plugged in.
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That's a biggie. Last thing I do is meter at the distro, the actual
edisons I will be plugging into.
David
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