We are deep in the Michigan woods on my parents property. My brother touched the trailer this morning and got zapped. Husband has gone over everything with his multi-meter and can't locate the problem. Can anyone point us in direction to look? This only hapoens when plugged into shore power. All good on battery.
2017 t@b sofitel(Dr@gonsFly)TV 2015 Silverado 2500hd(Behemoth). Wyandotte, Michigan.
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Assuming this is first it has ever happened - - - expect the outlet you are using for 120VAC Shore Power is the issue. Or an extension cord if you are not using your 'known good' equipment.
This is often caused by the wiring in the electrical receptacle that your RV is plugged into or an improperly wired extension cord. If the "hot" and "neutral" wires are reversed
TV: '17 Colorado V6 Z71 4x4, Tow Package, GM Brake Controller
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IMPORTANT NOTE: As you will learn from the article below, an outlet tester or Electrical Management System (EMS) are not currently (as far as I know) designed to detect this wiring issue.
https://www.rvtravel.com/rv-electricity-rpbg-update/
(Alde: 3020; Refrig: Isotherm Cruise 65 Eleg; Battery: BB 100Ah LiFePo4; Solar: Renogy 100Ah Suitcase; Victron BMV-712; Pwr Cntr: PD-4135KW2B; EMS: PI-HW30C)
Greg & Marlene (Tucson, AZ)
Anyone?
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I'm not an electrician, and have never had to deal with the situation described in the article, but if you have a "bootleg ground" and the original house wiring (i.e., the two existing wires) are accidentally reversed at the same time (i.e., reversed polarity) at the outlet as described in the article, it will make both sides of the outlet "hot." Your husband may have already done it, but I believe that the only way to check it is to turn off the house power, pull out the outlet, and see how the outlet is wired.
Electrical issues, although interesting to figure out, can be very frustrating. I hope you can get it all sorted out. Good luck with it!!
(Alde: 3020; Refrig: Isotherm Cruise 65 Eleg; Battery: BB 100Ah LiFePo4; Solar: Renogy 100Ah Suitcase; Victron BMV-712; Pwr Cntr: PD-4135KW2B; EMS: PI-HW30C)
Greg & Marlene (Tucson, AZ)
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I guess I assumed that someone had tried to create a ground connection using a bootleg jumper. Just to keep it straight, I did some editing to my last post above to describe a situation where there was no ground wire to start with (i.e., only a hot and neutral, without a ground wire), just to clarify what I was trying to convey. In the drawing of the three outlets in that article (see below), the first outlet depicts how a standard three-wire system is connected; the second depicts a bootleg ground; whereas the third outlet depicts the problem I thought might be the issue - - a reversed bootleg, which incorrectly has the hot and neutral wires swapped.
(Alde: 3020; Refrig: Isotherm Cruise 65 Eleg; Battery: BB 100Ah LiFePo4; Solar: Renogy 100Ah Suitcase; Victron BMV-712; Pwr Cntr: PD-4135KW2B; EMS: PI-HW30C)
Greg & Marlene (Tucson, AZ)
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Sm@ll World: 2021 320S Boondock, 6V Pb-acid
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(Alde: 3020; Refrig: Isotherm Cruise 65 Eleg; Battery: BB 100Ah LiFePo4; Solar: Renogy 100Ah Suitcase; Victron BMV-712; Pwr Cntr: PD-4135KW2B; EMS: PI-HW30C)
Greg & Marlene (Tucson, AZ)
Agree!!
My brother had a 30 amp receptacle installed at his house so I could plug in, but the Progressive EMS caught that the electrician had wired it to 240v.
This is a pretty common mistake, evidently, as electricians don't read the voltage right on the black part of the receptacle in our case (125v.)
The electrician will be coming back to makenit right.
2021 T@b 320 Boondock "Mattie Ross" | 2021 T@b Nights: 239 | Total nights in a T@b 455 | 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee L Overland | T@b owner since 2014
@rfuss928, yes! That's what identified the problem immediately at plug in. As my brother reached to disconnect our rv line, he brushed the t@b skin and got zapped. The ems did not identify reversed polarity until we connected the t@b. And yes the ems was connected to our shore power first, showed all good, before we connected the t@b. When we connected, lights went to reversed polarity and we disconnected immediately, as my brother's fingers tingled. We have never connected without an ems being hooked up first.
@jkjenn, our ems has identified reversed polarity at a campground pedestal before, so we didn't connect there and notified the owners. We were provided another location to plug in. BUT, this time, all lights read good and we plugged in. It was as we connected the t@b to the shore power that indicator lights switched to reversed polarity. We've never seen that happen previously. It had read reversed polarity before we connected to campground pedestals. This time, not until after connection. Which is why we are trying to solve the problem while working to remove dead old growth oak trees, before they come down on our log cabin, or lordy, the t@b!
@Bayliss, still working on it, but it's dark now, so bonfire time and we'll be at tree felling and electrical diagnostics tomorrow. Hope everyone is having an enjoyable holiday weekend. Thanks to everyone for the help, advice, and suggestions!
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It's easy to implicate old wiring (and that may very well be the culprit) but anything that energizes the grounded side of the T@B's 120V distribution system could cause those problems.
cheers
2015 Subaru Outback 3.6r (unsafe 200lb tongue weight limit until 2020 models)
2020 Subaru Outback XT
Pacific NW
cheere
I wonder if there could be a swapped hot and neutral at another outlet in the cabin (or other connection) upstream from the one the trailer was plugged in to. I don't know enough about it to say whether that could create the problem described. It will be interesting to learn if the issue goes away when the trailer is connected to a good 30-amp outlet.
(Alde: 3020; Refrig: Isotherm Cruise 65 Eleg; Battery: BB 100Ah LiFePo4; Solar: Renogy 100Ah Suitcase; Victron BMV-712; Pwr Cntr: PD-4135KW2B; EMS: PI-HW30C)
Greg & Marlene (Tucson, AZ)
I only encountered two “hot” trailers (one aH one and one a temporary office trailer while at the phone company, and both certainly scared me. Luckily, I was using the handle of my screwdriver to knock on the doors (arthritic knuckle), so I didn’t take a strong hit when my hand brushed against the trailer.
2021 T@B 320S Boondock “The T@B”
Towed by a white 2019 Ford F-150 4x4 Supercab, 3.5L V6 Ecoboost “The Truck”
DH says it will be relatively easy, as there are only 4 outlets, 2 light fixtures and a ceiling fan in this straight forward 2 wire system. And it's kinda easy to follow how it's wired. Thanks for all of your responses! @Bayliss, husband is going to study and understand the reversed polarity bootleg situation before tackling the job.
This is an interior photo of our cabin. As you can see, tracing the wiring and connections will not be difficult.
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2014 S Maxx
2011 Tacoma 4cyl ... edit: 2022 Tacoma 6cyl - oh yeah!
A_Little_T@b'll_Do_Ya
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A recommended NCVT. This would also detect a hot ground in a receptacle or help identify where a junction box is miss-wired, with out taking any connections apart.
https://www.amazon.com/Fluke-1AC-A1-II-VoltAlert-Non-Contact-Voltage/dp/B000EJ332O/ref=sr_1_3?crid=9CNVPPK50CDZ&dchild=1&keywords=fluke%2Bnon-contact%2Bvoltage%2Bdetector&qid=1599581261&sprefix=Fluke%2BNon-Contact%2Caps%2C156&sr=8-3&th=1
We should start carrying an NCVT along with a GFCI receptacle tester and multimeter!
Sorry for geeking out but a very important point for us trusting an Electrical Management System (EMS) to protect the life of our barefoot grand children.
I'm a little unclear about this statement:
I assume by the "power box" you mean the panel where the circuit breakers or fuses are installed. Your first statement referring to the "neutral and ground" being "wired into the same buss" implies a three-wire system. However, your second statement clearly states that you only have a two-wire system.
Does the first statement refer to the wires coming into the panel from the meter outside? Does the second statement refer to the wires leaving the panel to feed the cabin's branch circuits (including the outlet you have the T@B plugged into)?
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