angib wrote:.............................
Yup, often it's a direct short to arm or leg.....
Andrew



angib wrote:.............................
Yup, often it's a direct short to arm or leg.....
Andrew
prohandyman wrote:Thanks everyone. I was one of those that thought that a GFI would trip in the case of an overload. You set me straight.
bobhenry wrote:prohandyman wrote:Thanks everyone. I was one of those that thought that a GFI would trip in the case of an overload. You set me straight.
Dan : I still am not convinced that the gfi alone will not protect my trailer,. Why are they rated at 15 and or 20 amps if they can not detect an overload ?
I direct shorted my wiring while wiring up my tear and it tripped from the direct short. However I have not tried hooking up the coffee pot, crock pot ,microwave ,and a space heater on the same circuit to see if I can melt down the wiring either !
bobhenry wrote:Dan : I still am not convinced that the gfi alone will not protect my trailer,. Why are they rated at 15 and or 20 amps if they can not detect an overload ?
bobhenry wrote:
I direct shorted my wiring while wiring up my tear and it tripped from the direct short. However I have not tried hooking up the coffee pot, crock pot ,microwave ,and a space heater on the same circuit to see if I can melt down the wiring either !
jeep_bluetj wrote:
Plug 5 coffepots in, and it won't trip. I guarantee it. You'll be able to keep the coffee hot with the wire too.. It's gonna get nice and warm.. (Until something blows up)
Chuck Craven wrote:..........(1) Circuit breakers are rated for the maximum current the device will allow to pass through it. Which means it will trip at some current above its rated current.(2)Now what is bothering me about this thread is the word (GROUND). That green wire is not GROUND it is a safety ground wire. It is to supply a safety ground to each electrical device on that electrical circuit. (3)You can’t depend on the thin wall tubing or BX cable to give you a safety ground when it may have a loose mechanical connection some place. (4)Some cords have three wire plugs that will bring the safety ground to that device like your computer, TV may or may not have a three wire plug and your lamp most likely will not have a safety ground. (5)That is up to the manufacture to provide. If your table lamp has a 100-watt light bulb in it does it have a fuse or a breaker in it too? NO! Your camper is just like your table lamp, as the electrical code goes. But there is no law that you can’t put in a breaker / fuse box for your own piece of mind. If your camper is wired for 15 amps or 20 amps why are you plugging it in to a 30 amp circuit?
(6)In the Benroy build document the GFI outlet to be installed as the first outlet is for your protection. It is not needed. If you camp at an old Ma and Pop camp ground the power pole may not have GFI protection. (7)Also if you plug in your tear into an outside or garage outlet, in a house that was built before mid 1980’s a GFI protected outlet was not required. Ask your self do you want to stand in a water puddle and toast some bread in that two wire old toaster with out some type of GFI protection? (8)AS for pounding in a ground rod and connecting your tear to it, you have to be NUTS! Ask your self what is under the surface of the ground you plain on pounding that ground rod into. GAS line, POWER feeder for the campground, may be a oil pipe line. If it’s the power feeder for the campground, that could be fused at 1000 or more amps and if you hit that with your ground rod, POOF no more you….
(9)Ground rods are used to bleed off static electricity from devices in electrical storms.(10)That is its only purpose and not your TEAR! If lighting directly hits and electrical device the GROUND ROD does nothing!!!! A #14 or #12 wire is just a carbon track to 1,000,000 + volts at 1,000,000 + amps for 1/100th of a second.
:dead:
Chuck
Nope - You get electrons 'back and forth to the electric company' on the two wires they run to your house and the 'ground' (earth connection) has nothing to do with iteamarquardt wrote:One important function of the ground rod is to conduct the neural wire back to ground (earth) so that the electrons can flow back and forth to the power company. Here in the USA we use the earth as a conductor. I don't think this is the case everyplace in the world, but it is here in the USA
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