Runaway Tractor
Well-known member
Disconnecting the ground at the generator inlet is the tactic for installations without a neutral isolating subpanel (such as a UL listed interlocking backfeed breaker). The subpanel the OP is installing mitigates the need for this. Yes the ground from the truck should be connected. Yes the neutral from the truck needs to be connected.
I think so many of us have realized that the GROUND wire is the issue... even though having the ground, or not, is likely neither here nor there. Sure, a ground is 'nice', but it is NOT always necessary. Ground is not the be all end all to everything electrical. We went many many years without a ground in our homes.
For everyone else reading, please ignore all of this rambling nonsense. That's not how any of this works. This is something that would be in a satirical meme on a electrical hacks facebook group.Neutrals are similar. You'll notice that your EVSE does NOT require, or even have, a Neutral - it is only two hots and a ground. The Neutral is for load balancing, but there is no 'balancing' required for a device that draws the exact same amount from both hot wires.
A NEMA 14-50 outlet has a GROUND prong, yes, BY DEFAULT. It is because it can be used in many various scenarios where a Neutral IS needed, such as your oven / stove, or a motorhome / camper, where both hot wires are NOT necessarily having the same draw of power.
Many of your household appliances, bathroom appliances, and devices do NOT have a ground. Why? It's not needed.
Electricity seems to be kin to the English language: Many 'facts' and 'rules' don't always necessarily apply to every situation.
- "I" before "E", yes, mostly, but NOT always. etc.
- Pronounce a differently spelled word the same as another, yes... interesting.
- use a word two different ways to have two different meanings.
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