I'm probably not a hell of a lot ahead of you on AC... if you made me guess, that's actually 2 hots and a neutral in this case,
and 'ground' is made from the trailer panel to a ground rod outside. Just my half-educated guess from trying to brain how it'd work with 3 prongs, and knowing most of those I see have a ground rod.
Ground rods and electrodes are not the same thing as EGCs/grounding conductors.
Primary purpose of electrodes is for lightning suppression.
Grounding conductors on the other hand, are for establishing a low impedance pathway for fault current.
People often confuse the too but that is dangerous.
For a more detailed explanation checkout the Electrical FAQ thread.
Not an electrician... I don't even really grasp the difference between neutral & ground at the panel/supply end. Every panel I've worked in, the ground bar and the neutral bar are physically separate, but electrically connected.
The grounded conductor/neutral is so you can run 120v loads.
The grounding conductor/ground/EGC is the fault current pathway.
They are bonded at the main service panel so that breakers will trip upon fault current energizing something, that is bonded, that shouldnt be energized such as the chassis of an appliance.
All panels after the main(subpanels) should have an isolated neutral bar. This is to prevent neutral current from flowing on pathways that it shouldnt be on.
Well took the trailer to our hunting lease this morning. No issues luckily since technically we'd need a road permit for it given it's size. Snapped a few pics of the panel before we left. Still doesn't make sense to me. I think they were running it without a neutral....
Whoever wired that trailer didnt know what they were doing. Should be 4-wire.
So you're gonna have to rewire the feeder to that panel as they are using a 3-wire cord(wrong wire to use) and plug- a 6-50p. As has been said, its the wrong outlet/plug for this application. The proper outlet/plug would be a 4-wire 125/250v 14-**, the ** being the amperage rating.
Keep in mind that Portable generators have bonded neutrals. This means the panel in the trailer needs to be 4-wire with an isolated neutral bar because there should only be one neutral to ground bond(at the generator).
This also means you will need to remove the bond strap or screw on the neutral bar in the panel.
Dont get confused about ground rods as they dont have anything to do with the way the panel should be fed.
The generator has a 220v outlet. Thats what i was planning on using. Just found this wiring diagram. I know dc voltage from vehicles like the back of my hand. AC has always been a PITA. How does it work with no neutral side?
EDIT: I was looking at the picture wrong.
Does your generator have a 4-wire 120v/240v outlet? If not you will need to use a 120v outlet on the generator to feed the trailer.
What model generator do you have?
Take a pic of the generator outlets and post it here.