Danface
Well-known member
- First Name
- Dan
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2023
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- Central Mass
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- 2023 Lightning XLT
Agree ... but to that point, I know here that that isurance company increases the rate when a house has knob and tube. We used to ride in cars without seat belts (the auto companies fought for years for that .... I mean it was going to add $50 more to the car), rode bikes without helmets etc etc. Let's not forget the single most important thing of our current times in the US of A, lawsuits.This is a wild overreaction not based on reality. There is nothing to get anyone killed, and nothing to start a fire. If you're going to make such outrageous claims, back it up with factual examples or data. And not some completely absurd edge case that would burn the house down with or without the hookup.
There are lots of things that are in the name of safely doing what needs to be done in an emergency. This is one of them.
Circuit breakers in the panel will continue to operate just as they always have before. NOTHING about this changes the existing breaker's ability to function properly. This includes normal overload, GFCI, and AFCI type breakers. Fault current will get back to the source over the hot and neutral legs from the panel to the truck, just like it does when going back to the source on the utility pole outside the house. There isn't a separate grounding conductor going out to the transformer either. So to claim this is starting fires is non-sense.
By leaving the ground intact through the generator cable up to the female plug, you're protecting the cable itself from ground faults. Like if you run it over with a lawn mower or it gets water into it. The truck (or generator) overload and GFCI will handle it because it's bonded at the truck.
There is NOTHING to start a fire and NOTHING is unprotected. The only thing that is unprotected, is the page of the code book that says the bond needs to be at the first disconnect, which technically is the truck's built in circuit breaker. The end.
Cite code all you want if you're that much in love with it. I get it. We all get it. It's not the perfect code compliant method. We all get that a transfer switch is better. We all get it. And we're all still going to do what is safe, practical, prudent, and temporary in an emergency.
Meanwhile, there's millions of occupied and approved homes with knob and tube wiring or ungrounded outlets and no AFCIs and no GFCIs all across America that are actual fire risk that kill people. I'll worry about this safe and practical temporary emergency hookup when someone starts worry about actual dangers first.
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