by wannabefree » Tue Jun 30, 2009 10:15 pm
Let me expand on Looper's instructions a bit.
First - If you have an HF store nearby, you can pick up a multimeter for a few bucks. If not, your local Ace or box store will nick you about $!5. Either way, you pretty much need one.
Second - GFCIs work by sensing leakage current in the ground (the green or bare wire) wire. A very small leakage current is permissable, but not good. What that boils down to is the resistance (Ohms) measured between ground and hot or ground and neutral should be very high. How high? I don't know that, but probably more than 10k Ohms (10,000).
Third - GFCIs can be too sensitive, like in-laws. Try another GFCI first.
Fourth - Like Looper said, unplug the trailer and measure the resistance between neutral and ground, then hot and ground. If it's less than 10k, start looking for problems by disconnecting grounds on fixtures, charger, whatever has a ground. When the resistance goes up you are close to the culprit. Once you've found the bad guy, move the leads on the meter to the neutral or hot and ground of the suspect fixture. If you get near the same reading as you got at the start you should repair or preferably replace that puppy. If not, well, you haven't really found the problem, or you have more than one problem.
Side note - It is customary to tie neutral and ground together at one point in an electrical system (though that seems to be changing for reasons I won't go into and am not sure I understand anyway). That means inside your home's meter box, and only there. They should not be tied together in your trailer. You can tie the AC ground to the trailer frame, but I see no need.
Hope this helps,
Sherman
In anything at all, perfection is finally attained not when there is no longer anything to add, but when there is no longer anything to take away.
-- Antoine de Saint-Exupery