tdkkart
Well-known member
Google Generlink, I see a couple utility companies are quoting $625 installed, probably not too bad considering what a regular transfer switch setup will cost you installed.

Well, very prompt reply from Generlink.com.
MA23-N Generlink, Non-Surge 30amp $650
MA23-S Generlink, Surge 30 amp $725
MA24-N Generlink, Non-Surge 40amp $750
MA24-S Generlink, Surge 40amp $825
The other option is putting in a combination Meter Socket - Transfer switch. This was from our utilities website.
MFG: Durham
Catalog#: SB204DT100B
http://www.durhamcompany.com/Catalog/Durham Catalog/pg_0047.htm
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So the simplest transfer switch would be a DPDT switch installed between the meter and main breaker?
The simplest transfer switch would be the breaker interlock mechanism. It takes the least wiring, fewest connections for the fewest trouble spots, and if you look at the function closely it is just a DPDT switch. The cost factor makes it the best option besides it is simplest, effective, and safe.So the simplest transfer switch would be a DPDT switch installed between the meter and main breaker?
The simplest transfer switch would be the breaker interlock mechanism. It takes the least wiring, fewest connections for the fewest trouble spots, and if you look at the function closely it is just a DPDT switch. The cost factor makes it the best option besides it is simplest, effective, and safe.
Do you know what the price ranges are for the combos you shared from Durham?
Just get an automatice transfer switch unless you want to risk anothers life.

FYI: I finally recieved an email back on the price of the socket transfer switch we discussesd above.
That socket transfer switch I posted on above runs $370 from my electrical supplier. I would have to have it installed.
I would be very interested in any published information provided by a utility or a newspaper that documents someone being injured or killed from this activity.
I would be very interested in any published information provided by a utility or a newspaper that documents someone being injured or killed from this activity.
I have been considering installing an interlock on my breaker panel so I can connect a generator to it. As I investigate this, it is apparent that the rules in Canada are far different than in the USA. So for the Canadians in the crowd, I thought I would post this here so we can all be better informed.
It appears that in Canada, the use of interlocks is illegal, you must use a transfer switch. Here is a response from a tech. support guy at Schneider when I asked him about the QOCGK2 interlock for use on my QO series load center.
"The QOCGK2 is not CSA approved and can not be installed in a panel in Canada. Even if you find a way to install it on the breakers, it does not meet the Canadian Code.
With reference to the document F0102AN9901EP, many Authorities have taken the stance that if you do not have a permanent generator, you have to be able to switch the neutral. You would have to check with you local inspector to see what they require.
We do not offer a product similar to the QOCGK2 in Canada. It is required to be able to lock you main breaker off so the hasp is a required part of the breaker to meet CSA requirements."
This explains why the Canadian load centres appear to be different than the US ones even from the same manufacturer.
And to further complicate the issue, the type of transfer switch you must use is dependant on whether the generator's neutral is bonded to the frame OR has a floating neutral. Here is a link to the Application Note on the topic that has been published by Schneider Canada on the topic.
http://members.rennlist.org/warren/Gen_Panels_Appl_Note_EN.pdf
Well if your gen set is mis wired and you energize the neutral at the main panel the hots are going straight to ground.
here it is for $65
http://ecatalog.mecampbell.com/default.aspx?page=item detail&itemcode=SQDHOMCGK2
here is a good shot of one installed
http://www.johnnypopper.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=16393
Someone is making a killing on a simple piece of metal . . .![]()
not really. between designing and making the thing, UL listing for USA and Canada, warehousing, and all the other costs involved, they probably make $5 or $10 off the thing.

UTILITY
S Interlocked Circuit Breakers
T 1. Turn UTILITY circuit breaker “OFF”
A 2. Turn OFF all branch circuit breakers
N 3. Slide this interlock plate up --------->
D 4. Turn STANDBY circuit breaker “ON”
B 5. Turn “ON” branch circuit breakers
Y supplying essential circuits.
-- Reverse procedure to return to
UTILITY circuit breaker
here is what the label looks like.
Did not know how to put the long lines in
and it looses the spacing when posted
my panel is triple grounded
I have a standard copper rod
I have a second multistrand 4 gauge wire to the copper cold water line
And the twisted ground bare wire return to the grid from the utility.
Utility is just 2 hots and a ground coming into the box, there is no neutral on the utility pole, neutral is the ground at ground potential. which is that large twisted multistrand bare aluminum wire which goes from house to pole and the whole area. AFAIK, all the connected homes all share the same common ground. I think they even ground the poles.
A lot will have to go wrong to destroy my electrical ground
think about it, the utility bare 'neutral' is also bonded to ground.
This bare wire will carry a current return to the utility but it is still a bare wire. Never heard of someone shocked off it if everything is as it should be. I wonder how much current is flowing threw that wire for the 120 volt potential of hot to bare neutral.
I also wonder if that utility 'neutral' ground was cut if my house ground would handle the load. I think it would, but I suppose you might be able to burn threw a single 6 gauge ground wire that would be carrying all the current on the 120 volt side to ground.
I think it is best to have at least 2 separate ground wires grounded to earth. The code here says a single solid copper wire 6 gauge to 2 ground rods 7 or 8 feet apart, or one wire grounded to cold water line and a separate wire to a single ground rod
http://www.psc.state.fl.us/consumers/utilitypole/en/allutilitypoleinfo.aspx
# Multi-Grounded Neutral (MGN)
Distribution lines have a grounded neutral conductor to provide a return path for the electricity. On many poles, if the distribution line is also connected to the ground wire (or grounding conductor), the line is called a multi-grounded neutral.
If the neutral to your split phase service is broken the voltages on your house outlets etc go completely nuts. It burns things out and is very dangerous. The ground stake is not a power return.Actually curious how well the ground returns power if the neutral somehow is broken.
Not willing to test this myself, but somewhere somebody knows
Actually curious how well the ground returns power if the neutral somehow is broken.
The current returns through the other Line.Had a branch come down on my service, the neutral was spliced in the air by the power company(triplex). Middle of winter, wasn't living in the house at the time, somehow my furnace(actually a boiler) was still running. Was several days before the power company could get there, power outages everywhere so I had to wait. Furnace never shut down so it must return some current
Power transmission
In Single Wire Earth Return
Single wire earth return
Single wire earth return or single wire ground return is a single-wire transmission line for supplying single-phase electrical power from an electrical grid to remote areas at low cost. It is principally used for rural electrification, but also finds use for larger isolated loads such as water...
(SWER) AC electrical distribution systems, costs are saved by using just a single high voltage conductor for the power grid, while routing the AC return current through the earth. This system is mostly used in rural areas where large earth currents will not otherwise cause hazards.
It turns out that the power company uses the Earth as one of the wires in the power system. The planet is a good conductor, and it's huge, so it makes a handy return path for electrons.
"The reality is with a multigrounded system, part of the current associated with customer load flows through the earth," Cook said
A 1995 survey by the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission of 48 utilities found that 59 percent of the current returns through the earth. The Michigan attorney general says as much as 75 percent of Consumers Energy returns through the earth.