Grancuda
Well-known member
When using a small portable generator, they all seem to have a threaded stud for an earth ground. Is this to be used every time you use it or just when you use grounded plug devices?
When I use my personal generator at our Lions Club cookouts I always drive a single ground rod if we are on grass. My theory is it can't hurt. I too would like to know some expert opinions on this such as how can a GFI work properly if the genny is not grounded.
A GFCI doesn't depend on a ground to work. It senses the difference in current between the hot and the neutral, and trips if it exceeds a few milliamps.
How can you have a bonded neutral without a ground rod?
The reason for an earth ground is to keep the voltages from floating wrt local earth. Without it you can get weird transient common mode voltages—the two sides will always be 120v apart, but they could be 0v and 120v or 1000v and 1120v away from local ground.
That said, outside a building wiring situation, it's probably a non-issue. Building wiring can have transient voltages induced by lightning, and bonding neutral to ground will drain those off. For a generator being used for a single piece of equipment it's unlikely to matter.
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You do need a path back to the generator to trip the gfci: through the earth!
Imagine the generator being isolated completely from the earth ground: then you could short the live wire coming from the generator directly to an earth ground without the gfci ever noticing a thing since there's no current flow.
Again, the generator frame will almost always provide a good enough ground by itself, even a resistance of 7kohm between generator frame and the earth will allow enough current to flow to trip a 30mA GFCI on 230V.
You are going to get there but gfci doesn't need a ground. Its what makes it so valuable, even if there is an interruption along the way, improper bond etc it works. It should be called ground fault circuit sensing interrupter for lack of better wording.Well, that's what I was saying isn't it; no current path, so the gfci won't trip. I mentioned it was similar to an isolation transformer or even an IT earthed net.
I was replying to sberry; a gfci becomes kind of useless without any ground connection of the generator.
It won't detect a phase wire becoming shorted to ground since there's no current flowing= no current
mine has a place to attach a ground wire so I always do. I have a piece of solid copper wire clamped to a 18 inch stake and drive it in the ground.