Then is there a potential problem with not having the ground bar bussed to the neutral bar, and a ground rod installed when camping, as is the case with most residential wiring?
Dan,
I don't think that's what Jeff and I are saying. Technically, you do have the ground and neutral connected back at the shoreline connection. But the GFI separates the ground from the neutral and then detects when there is current flowing through the ground wire. That is the best way I can explain how a GFI works.
After re reading the replies to my question, I think there may be some confusion on what a ground circuit truly is. Granted a ground rod ties the grounding buss to the neutral wire at the incoming power source. But the reason for a 3 wire circuit is to make sure there is a neutral path in case the neutral (white) wire is opened by burning in two, loose connector, etc. A GFI will detect such a condition and also detect a current path through the ground wire that goes back to the grounding buss bar. ANY current through a ground wire is a fault.
In a safe non faulted circuit, whether a GFI or a normal recepticle, all the current flows through the hot and neutral white wire. But as Jeff pointed out, if part of it is flowing through you to ground then a ground fault exists whether you have a ground rod installed or not. Even in a properly installed residential wiring. That's why all kitchen and bathroom circuits are required to be on GFI circuits.
In a TD, you are right, there is no ground rod installed (except back at the source) and if you are using a GFI, the GFI will detect ground faults (and also if you have a failure of the grounding wire in the shore line cord).
Think of your TD as an extended room connected to the power source. Just like a bedroom at the opposite end from the breaker box of that 150 foot long house.
So, it's not a question of the potential problem being greater because of no grounding rod at the TD, it's a question of overload protection of the circuit wire. The two are a separate problem.
Overload is excess current in a circuit and ground fault is current in the ground wire circuit where there should never be any.
Maybe someone can jump in and explain it better.
Dave