Sometimes these things will work after re-assembly even though we never saw the actual problem while taking it apart. One stray strand of wire is often the culprit on a new installation, and sometimes very hard to see.
Isolate and analyze.


cokebottle10 wrote:1. You pluged in something else to the GFCI and it did not trip. GFCI should be good. Correct
2. I'm guessing that when you pluged the cord into the GFCI without plugging in the TD it did not trip? Cord could still be bad. Did you plug something into the cord pluged into the GFCI? Did it trip? I plugged a box fan into the cord and then into the GFI and it did not trip. Turned on the fan and the GFI did not trip. I'm assuming the cord is ok.
3. With all the breakers off and the cord pluged into the GFCI it will trip. Correct
All circuits when pluged into a non-GFCI check good with power on. Correct
A GFCI will only trip if current is passing through it and one side is not equal with the other. If the breakers are all off then no current should be flowing. It looks like you have something up stream of the breakers. Is the 12 volt converter upstream? I don't have a converter. The cord from the power inlet goes directly into the power center with no branches. Could the power inlet be bad?
4. The GFCI in your breaker box looks like it only has one white wire going to it. It should have a white wire out of the breaker that is connected to the neutral bar. The white wires coming back from the circuits that the GFCI protect should go to the GFCI neutral terminal. Not the neutral bar. You may have it this way, I just do not see it in the photo. The pigtail from the GFI breaker was connected to the neutral bar, just hard to see in that photo. I was going to use the GFI breaker as the main. I switched it out this morning for a regular breaker and the GFI outlet still trips.
PS By the way, that is a Beautiful TD you have. First class all the way! Thank you. I would hate to burn it down with bad wiring though....
Larwyn wrote:You have it narrowed down to a small area. I would disconnect the feed to the breaker box, wire nut, tape, or safely isolate the bare ends and see if it still trips.
planovet wrote:This problem is really bugging me.Thankfully I have it isolated to a small area. I will try and go home during lunch and try your suggestions. I hope it isn't the power inlet, I have it sealed pretty good to the side of my tear. But I want to get this figured out now BEFORE I put my countertop down for good. After that, access to my electrical compartment will be rather cramped at best.
One other question. Is using a GFI breaker a good idea for the main breaker (the breaker where the shore power comes in)? Will it help protect in a wet environment or will it always be tripping when there is a little moisture outside?
Thanks for all your help so far. I wouldn't be this far along if it wasn't for the fine people on this forum. I'll let you know what I find out when I get back home.
cokebottle10 wrote:If the tester that you show in your post reads good when you plug the TD into a non-GFCI then check to see if the neutral bar and the ground bar are connected some how. If you used a small breaker box for your circuit breakers then you may have a "bonding screw" in the neutral bar. This will have to be removed. This screw or jumper connects the neutral to ground (back of box or to ground bar) The neutral is designed to carry current. The ground is not. If they are some how connected the ground is carring some of the load and this will trip the GFCI. This could be as small as one strand of wire poking out of a terminal and touching the back of the box. Much like the problem in the beginning of this post.
P.S. I also think that you should connect the ground to the TD frame. I look at the TD as a appliance that you plug in. A table saw, refrigerator, washing machine all have metal frames and the metal frames are grounded. I also think that the RV manufactures do this. But this is just may opinion. Grounding the frame or not has nothing to do with the problem that you have now.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests