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I misspoke. I meant at the distribution panel.
In Response To:
"neutral and ground connect at receptacles" - that should certainly NOT be standard household practice..
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Which could be why this could happen on a boat if someone didn't know what they were doing.
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AC Wiring
Any UL Listed Marine grade...
Re: AC Ground
Isn't that what I said.
No...
It seems to me...
I think you're right Brian, which means I may be wrong too.
Which edition?
Second edition. The issue for me is, NOT to connect the Grn(grd) and White(neutral) at the boat.
I think it makes sense. You only want one return, the neutral(white) from the boat in the system.
Exactly...
"neutral and ground connect at receptacles" - that should certainly NOT be standard household practice..
I misspoke. I meant at the distribution panel.
And with a generator or an inverter?
Single or dual pole AC breakers?
Mine has three poles...
Could be a little challenging
Would GFCI outlets give the same protection?
picture has nothing to do with subject
GFCI...
Thanks Brian, I had not intended for the outlets...
GFCI on boats.
Why would you have a higher trip rate, Al?
Leakage currents.
Standard GFCIs...
My concern, Al...
Unless you are running a refrideration unit with AC
Well neither Defender nor WM carries any GFCI like that Al.
Check out BlueSea #3106
FYI
It's also the rated SPEED of the disconnect...A slow cut-off, even a relatively low threshod could be an issue.
Thanks Al, if I decide to replace the breaker, that sounds like a good choice.
Further thoughts on this.
"Marine Industry"...
Carling
variety...
Black breakers
Well then, who declared that...
No one did..
Yes..
Single pole on branch circuits.
Ancor triplex tinned cable
Regarding tinned wire