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portable generator
How can I ground a 1000 watt Yamaha portable generator( EF1000is) to a
boat ? |
portable generator
wrote in message ... How can I ground a 1000 watt Yamaha portable generator( EF1000is) to a boat ? Why ?? -- Regards ........ Rheilly Phoull |
portable generator
If this is for any purpose besides a temporary electric need like
powering Christmas lights for a one time boat parade I would suggest rethinking your whole strategy.... or name me in your will.... portables and marine gensets have almost nothing in common, except the fact that they both make power. If it is for a one time activity on CALM water..... may I suggest you put it on the SWIM platform (Fuel leaks can ruin your whole day... or life) As far as grounding.... they usually have a grounding lug on them. Just attach a wire from that lug to the ground of your boat. Not sure why you would want to do that. you cannot combine power from multiple gensets to power one large item. (Unless they are synced.... impossible with a portable genset like you are talking about) Rheilly Phoull wrote: wrote in message ... How can I ground a 1000 watt Yamaha portable generator( EF1000is) to a boat ? Why ?? |
portable generator
Please help me understand. MyYamaha manual says" be sure to ground (
earth) the generator" and the picture is showing a wire connected to the generator and the other end is a nail burried to the earth ground. How to I do that on a boat? I have a 26 foot Monterey with shore power.I purchased a boat shore power adapter to regular household plug ( 3 prong) and I was thingking of pluging that to the generator. I am confuse about grounding of the generator to the earth ground ( the nailing to ground thing) ???? |
portable generator
wrote in message ... Please help me understand. MyYamaha manual says" be sure to ground ( earth) the generator" and the picture is showing a wire connected to the generator and the other end is a nail burried to the earth ground. How to I do that on a boat? I have a 26 foot Monterey with shore power.I purchased a boat shore power adapter to regular household plug ( 3 prong) and I was thingking of pluging that to the generator. I am confuse about grounding of the generator to the earth ground ( the nailing to ground thing) ???? Well you might be getting out of your depth a bit :-) but if the earth pin of outlets on the generator are bonded to the neutral then the adaptor should be OK. If not then the ground connection on the genny should be conected to the earth on the board on your boat. Since you seem a little unsure it might be safer to get a little proffesional advice. With regards to earthing on boats, it is a lot deeper than most are aware and long term effects in the form of electrolysis can cause real damage. If you are just going to bring the genny aboard now and then IMHO I would not be too concerned about the earthing situation since the supply (The genny) is independant from the mains and would be very much like "double insulation" with regard to earth faults. -- Regards ........ Rheilly Phoull |
portable generator
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portable generator
Thanks for the reply. Fuel, CO and other non-electrical issues aside,
what did you mean by shock issues? And how does the round pin carry the ground to the boat, if the boat is fibreglass, sitting on water, and the generator is connected to the boat's shore power plug with a 3-wire shore power cable? Where does that round pin ground lead to? Thank you for any insights you can provide to this issue. Jim On Tue, 20 Apr 2004 22:19:33 -0400, Ed wrote: For short term use, you should be fine from a grounding point of view. The round pin on the standard plug is the ground and that should carry the ground to the boat. There are many other dangers here you should consider that the grounding will not solve... including but not limited to: Fuel issues, shock issues, CO issues, etc. Jim Thompson wrote: On Sun, 18 Apr 2004 22:46:45 -0400, wrote: Please help me understand. MyYamaha manual says" be sure to ground ( earth) the generator" and the picture is showing a wire connected to the generator and the other end is a nail burried to the earth ground. How to I do that on a boat? I have a 26 foot Monterey with shore power.I purchased a boat shore power adapter to regular household plug ( 3 prong) and I was thingking of pluging that to the generator. I am confuse about grounding of the generator to the earth ground ( the nailing to ground thing) ???? I have never understood that issue either. I have been on the edge of buying a portable generator for several years, but never got around to it because we rarely need it. Meanwhile I have been researching that question on the net and in books like Nigel Calder for years too, and never found a practical answer Surely there is a simple recipe for non-electrrician boaters like us? Our boat has an AC shore power 3-pronged inlet socket. We have a big yellow 30-amp shore power cable, wihch of course we cannot use with a portable generator like Romeoo's: such generators typically output electricity through a normal household outdoor 3-pronged extension cord. I have a 30-amp pigtail shorepower adapter that can be used to adapt the household extension cord to the boat's shore power inlet socket. Our boat's AC wiring presumably is independent of the boat's DC wiring. Or at least I certainly hope it is. The DC system's ground is the battery/engine block. We have no "ground" to the ocean, nor would I want stray current in the ocean around my boat. Say I'm at anchor. If I put the generator on the swimdeck, run the landlubber extention cord to the boat's AC input plug (with the pigtail adapter), and turn on the generator, then where is ground? Is it necessary to emulate the nail in the dirt, as if setup in a campground when powering an RV? |
portable generator
All metal (on most boats) is bonded together (green wires). This
includes the outdrives, shafts, thru-hulls etc. The bonding wire is usually connected to ship's ground (Negative battery) and to the Green side of the 110/220 sytem. SOMETIMES... there is a device that sits in the middle to help save your zincs in areas with lots of current in the water... this aside... the Ground wire on your shorepower is connected to the bonding system. As far as shock issues... if you touch a hot wire... or are on the swim platform when a wave hits you and the generator... or if the plug gets wet and you touch it (or any number of things...) you will get shocked.... GFIs help but will not eliminate the issue. Ed Jim Thompson wrote: Thanks for the reply. Fuel, CO and other non-electrical issues aside, what did you mean by shock issues? And how does the round pin carry the ground to the boat, if the boat is fibreglass, sitting on water, and the generator is connected to the boat's shore power plug with a 3-wire shore power cable? Where does that round pin ground lead to? Thank you for any insights you can provide to this issue. Jim On Tue, 20 Apr 2004 22:19:33 -0400, Ed wrote: For short term use, you should be fine from a grounding point of view. The round pin on the standard plug is the ground and that should carry the ground to the boat. There are many other dangers here you should consider that the grounding will not solve... including but not limited to: Fuel issues, shock issues, CO issues, etc. Jim Thompson wrote: On Sun, 18 Apr 2004 22:46:45 -0400, wrote: Please help me understand. MyYamaha manual says" be sure to ground ( earth) the generator" and the picture is showing a wire connected to the generator and the other end is a nail burried to the earth ground. How to I do that on a boat? I have a 26 foot Monterey with shore power.I purchased a boat shore power adapter to regular household plug ( 3 prong) and I was thingking of pluging that to the generator. I am confuse about grounding of the generator to the earth ground ( the nailing to ground thing) ???? I have never understood that issue either. I have been on the edge of buying a portable generator for several years, but never got around to it because we rarely need it. Meanwhile I have been researching that question on the net and in books like Nigel Calder for years too, and never found a practical answer Surely there is a simple recipe for non-electrrician boaters like us? Our boat has an AC shore power 3-pronged inlet socket. We have a big yellow 30-amp shore power cable, wihch of course we cannot use with a portable generator like Romeoo's: such generators typically output electricity through a normal household outdoor 3-pronged extension cord. I have a 30-amp pigtail shorepower adapter that can be used to adapt the household extension cord to the boat's shore power inlet socket. Our boat's AC wiring presumably is independent of the boat's DC wiring. Or at least I certainly hope it is. The DC system's ground is the battery/engine block. We have no "ground" to the ocean, nor would I want stray current in the ocean around my boat. Say I'm at anchor. If I put the generator on the swimdeck, run the landlubber extention cord to the boat's AC input plug (with the pigtail adapter), and turn on the generator, then where is ground? Is it necessary to emulate the nail in the dirt, as if setup in a campground when powering an RV? |
portable generator
On Thu, 22 Apr 2004 05:22:45 GMT, WaIIy
wrote: I always heard you NEVER mix the AC and DC ground together. Never. Of course, I'd like to know if this is true, but it makes a lot of sense not to. I was under the same impression. I thought that my AC system was grounded through the shore power plug to the 3-wire system ashore. Here is my rudimentary understanding: http://jimthompson.net/boating/Elect...lectronics.htm Jim |
portable generator
I always heard you NEVER mix the AC and DC ground together. Never.
Of course, I'd like to know if this is true, but it makes a lot of sense not to. You guys have bumped into the "green wire controversy". Some "authorities" say you should not connect AC and DC systems. Charles Payne is of this opinion in his book. I'm not sure, but I think Nigel Calder also thinks its a bad idea. On the other hand I think Dave Gerr recently had an article in Sail or Cruising World in which he said they should be connected together. I think this may also be the current ABYC recommendation. The rational is that if you somehow get 110V AC into your DC system you can be electrocuted by touching the DC if it has no earth ground. Personally I think the chances of getting AC into my DC system are so low that I intend to leave my systems as the original manufacturer installed them, ie. separate. "WaIIy" wrote in message ... On Wed, 21 Apr 2004 19:37:43 -0400, Ed wrote: All metal (on most boats) is bonded together (green wires). This includes the outdrives, shafts, thru-hulls etc. The bonding wire is usually connected to ship's ground (Negative battery) and to the Green side of the 110/220 sytem. SOMETIMES... there is a device that sits in the middle to help save your zincs in areas with lots of current in the water... this aside... the Ground wire on your shorepower is connected to the bonding system. As far as shock issues... if you touch a hot wire... or are on the swim platform when a wave hits you and the generator... or if the plug gets wet and you touch it (or any number of things...) you will get shocked.... GFIs help but will not eliminate the issue. Ed I always heard you NEVER mix the AC and DC ground together. Never. Of course, I'd like to know if this is true, but it makes a lot of sense not to. |
portable generator
Yes, there is lots of info out there.
In my original post I mentioned Charles Payne. Actually the name is John C. Payne and the book is "Boat Owners Electrical and Electronics Bible". He is against connecting the two systems. This is a fairly old book though. I checked my Nigel Calder books and he basically points out the benefits and the problems. He concludes that you shouldn't connect the systems unless you use a galvanic isolator or isolation transformer. I suppose before galvanic isolators became readily available the general consensus was to leave these two systems unconnected. Adding the isolator and grounding the AC system to the DC system gives you some extra safety provided the isolator and its circuit continues to function as intended so I guess the current thinking is to go this route. "WaIIy" wrote in message ... On Thu, 22 Apr 2004 19:36:29 GMT, "Gordon Wedman" wrote: I always heard you NEVER mix the AC and DC ground together. Never. Of course, I'd like to know if this is true, but it makes a lot of sense not to. You guys have bumped into the "green wire controversy". Some "authorities" say you should not connect AC and DC systems. Charles Payne is of this opinion in his book. I'm not sure, but I think Nigel Calder also thinks its a bad idea. On the other hand I think Dave Gerr recently had an article in Sail or Cruising World in which he said they should be connected together. I think this may also be the current ABYC recommendation. The rational is that if you somehow get 110V AC into your DC system you can be electrocuted by touching the DC if it has no earth ground. Personally I think the chances of getting AC into my DC system are so low that I intend to leave my systems as the original manufacturer installed them, ie. separate. Thanks for the info. I found a bit of stuff.... AC Ground See Practical Sailor August 15, 1995 for a detailed treatment of the green wire. The best solution is a heavy and expensive isolation transformer. The acceptable solution (for the rest of us) is to install a light and inexpensive Galvanic Isolator in the green wire, between the shorepower cord socket on your boat, and the connection to the boat's AC panel. Then, connect the grounding conductor (green) of the AC panel directly to the engine negative terminal or its bus. Note that this meets ABYC's recommendations. In choosing Galvanic Isolators, make sure that you select one that has a continuous current rating that is at least 135% the current rating on the circuit breaker on your dock box. Certain Galvanic Isolators (e.g. Quicksilver) include large capacitors in parallel with the isolation diodes, which in certain situations theoretically provide better galvanic protection. Unfortunately, these units cost substantially more than conventional Galvanic Isolators. If you feel like spending real money on galvanic isolation, you might as well do it right and buy an isolation transformer. |
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