wautard1
Active member
This TS works with the lightning, according to this thread.Does that TS switch the neutral? If not, that’s your problem.
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This TS works with the lightning, according to this thread.Does that TS switch the neutral? If not, that’s your problem.
I've had this exact issue. I'm going to do my best to go through the steps to identify the problem below but it's possible I miss a step since I'm going by memory, which is not good. Be safe. Don't test a hot panel. Assume it's hot until you confirm it's not. You are testing for continuity, not current. Anyway...It faults as soon as I plug in the cord to the truck even with all breakers off.
This has been extremely frustrating because the Generac documentation is very minimal at anything to do with troubleshooting.
The breakers only switch the hot wire on and off. He needs to figure out where neutral and ground are touching so switching a breaker doesn't really help.Start with all of the breakers off. Turn on one at a time until it faults.
I just reread your initial post. What do you mean by "shared neutral circuits?" If you have circuits sharing neutrals that aren't all on the switch panel this is almost certainly your problem.Originally thought it was due to shared neutral circuits I have but sounds like you have those as well but the system still works.
First, I found the 2 circuits with the ground fault. Interestingly, they share an entry into the main panel but don’t look to be touching. Currently tracking down what is on those circuits.I just reread your initial post. What do you mean by "shared neutral circuits?" If you have circuits sharing neutrals that aren't all on the switch panel this is almost certainly your problem.
Usually a "shared neutral" circuit is in reference to the old use of three wire (RED/Black/White/ground) to run TWO circuits. Was economical and since the red and the black were on opposite legs, the neutral did not get overloaded. (If you or some idiot later moved the wires to the same leg inside the box, then sparks could fly)I just reread your initial post. What do you mean by "shared neutral circuits?" If you have circuits sharing neutrals that aren't all on the switch panel this is almost certainly your problem.
Interesting how little condemnation or comment this engendered when it was written. Pulling the ground pin sounds pretty radical. Certainly not recommended. Now it the setting of a Hybrid AIO (All in One) inverter like the Sol-Arc, in reality, not much is left ungrounded. The truck and a few feet of cable from the 240V truck plug to the Sol-Arc. Remember that the world worked OK for a long time with ungrounded circuits. Lots of old houses still have them. In a safe, quality environment, they are safe. They are NOT FORGIVING. Deviate from safe and you get bad juju.....You have to: (presuming your Solark is set Limited to Load).
1. Remove the ground pin from the cord running to the truck (this stops the GFCI from tripping).
2. Turn off time of use under system work mode.
3. Turn on Gen Charge under Battery Settings, limit to 70 amps (keep in mind this is referring to amps @ 51.7v not 240---really confusing).
4. Cut power from grid.
5. Gen Force under Battery Settings.
6. Wait about a minute, then it will cut in.
7. It picks up house load first, then whatever excess charges the battery.
That piqued my interest when he stated it, but it was within the process of trying to eliminate which of his circuits was the culprit, hopefully he resolves the matter and resumes a ~safer~ operation that this entire thread is all about, plenty of good advice given on rooting out the problem, but lets not let work arounds remain operational after the fixes are made.Interesting how little condemnation or comment this engendered when it was written. Pulling the ground pin sounds pretty radical. Certainly not recommended.
I do not think eopiela had the slightest intent of "elimination" in that post. It was how to use the Lightning into the generator port of what is called a "hybrid" or "All in One" solar inverter. The AIO units perform a pretty tall task when functioning correctly. They can use solar or batteries to power your loads, but also pass through grid power if your batteries are depleted and its dark. Or they can ask a generator to power on (only gen sets with appropriate circuitry). And when they really get it right, all that stuff is highly programable as to when and how it happens.That piqued my interest when he stated it, but it was within the process of trying to eliminate which of his circuits was the culprit, hopefully he resolves the matter and resumes a ~safer~ operation that this entire thread is all about, plenty of good advice given on rooting out the problem, but lets not let work arounds remain operational after the fixes are made.
All good info with one exception. What we’re calling a “shared neutral circuit” (the term electricians more commonly use is “multi-wire branch circuit”) is not currently prohibited by the NEC.Usually a "shared neutral" circuit is in reference to the old use of three wire (RED/Black/White/ground) to run TWO circuits. Was economical and since the red and the black were on opposite legs, the neutral did not get overloaded. (If you or some idiot later moved the wires to the same leg inside the box, then sparks could fly)
This is safe and will not cause a problem per se. But you cannot use a traditional single pole GFCI with either of the two circuits since the share the neutral. Thus modern code prohibits shared neutral circuits today. FYI, you CAN protect those two circuits from ground fault -- by using an appropriately sized 240V double pole GFCI. But they are expensive and to my knowledge, cannot be have as AFI/GFI, thus again why NOT to do new construction with shared neutrals.
Oh -- and shared neutral circuits do NOT have ground and neutral bonded when done correctly. They should not interfere with the GFI of the Lightning.
It faults as soon as I plug in the cord to the truck even with all breakers off.
This has been extremely frustrating because the Generac documentation is very minimal at anything to do with troubleshooting.
Does that TS switch the neutral? If not, that’s your problem.
Mine will often fault when the solenoid fires to throw the switch. If I reset it then it runs fine. It will even fault when I throw the switch to go back to grid power. I think the solenoid is inducing enough voltage on the ground to cause the fault. Have you tried resetting the ProPower after the switch is complete? If that doesn’t fix it then double check that you picked the correct neutrals to match the breakers you moved. I have two circuits that enter my panel through the same strain relief and when I trace them I picked the wrong neutral the first time. It can be confusing trying to trace out the white wires in a crowded panel.My electricians installed my Generac 6852 30A TS and I am getting the same results. The truck immediately faults when we go to use the backup feature. Someone on this site said that it's just a simple rewiring of the grounds/neutrals. I hope that they can just rewire it and get it to work. They are coming back out this afternoon.
I think when amature electricians are dispensing advice on the internet "code" is a proven guardrail. What works for a family farm doesn't necessarily work for a weekend handyman wiring a panel for the first time.I think there are many situations where the GFI of the Lightning is just going to be too cumbersome to accept. Question is just what are the dangers of defeating it? Its not clear, by the way that this is a "code" discussion. Many of you do indeed need to live strictly by the rules or what ever the local authority enforces. Some of us are kind of in the wild west where its a series of trade offs..... Discerning "super safe idiot proof" versus "safe enough" gets to be a challenge.