Newton
Well-known member
The truck is a bonded neutral generator (which must have a GFCI) also known as a separately derived power system. Many home generators are floating neutral, especially the cheaper ones. This kind of stuff is a big issue in the marine world since when on shore power you want to be unbonded (in the USA) but bonded when using a generator or inverter. If you get it wrong you can at least melt your prop or at worst electrocute a swimmer, so I'm cautious about it on land.
The easy and correct solution is to install a subpanel that switches the neutral so it is bonded to the house ground normally and bonded to the truck when in generator mode. I used the Generac Homelink, it is not super expensive nor difficult to install and has the virtue of having lights on the panel that tell you if utility power comes back on. You do have to select which circuits are backed up.
The problem for me is that you have two incompatible electrical designs that use the same plug, NEC should have required bonded systems to use a different plug than unbonded ones. Instead we have to have this wordy little plaque on the inlet telling what type of generator that you are allowed to connect.
The easy and correct solution is to install a subpanel that switches the neutral so it is bonded to the house ground normally and bonded to the truck when in generator mode. I used the Generac Homelink, it is not super expensive nor difficult to install and has the virtue of having lights on the panel that tell you if utility power comes back on. You do have to select which circuits are backed up.
The problem for me is that you have two incompatible electrical designs that use the same plug, NEC should have required bonded systems to use a different plug than unbonded ones. Instead we have to have this wordy little plaque on the inlet telling what type of generator that you are allowed to connect.
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