I have two 30 amp lines coming into the boat. We were hauled last week and I used an adapter (30A to 15A) to connect the boat to a new power pedestal in the yard so I could run a dehumidifier over the Florida summer storage. The boat trips the 15 A GFCI on the pedestal as soon as the extension cord is plugged into either of the 30 A power input sockets, even with the AC panels turned off.
I am wondering if it could be caused by the galvanic isolators ? I don't see why as a GFCI can be used without a ground wire from what I know.
The main breakers and the isolators are the only thing connected if the panel is off. I did not have the problem last year but they just installed these new power pedestals with the GFCIs.
The only other possibility I considered is the reverse polarity light on the panels must be connected to the line, not sure if they are connected with the panel breaker turned off.
I am now running on a 30 amp shore power cord going through a 50 A adapter.
I do not have an inverter on board, our battery charger is fed off a breaker on the main AC panel.
Any suggestions on a test procedure ? As simple as unplug the power and start to measure resistance between hot and ground ?
thanks, Bob
I am wondering if it could be caused by the galvanic isolators ? I don't see why as a GFCI can be used without a ground wire from what I know.
The main breakers and the isolators are the only thing connected if the panel is off. I did not have the problem last year but they just installed these new power pedestals with the GFCIs.
The only other possibility I considered is the reverse polarity light on the panels must be connected to the line, not sure if they are connected with the panel breaker turned off.
I am now running on a 30 amp shore power cord going through a 50 A adapter.
I do not have an inverter on board, our battery charger is fed off a breaker on the main AC panel.
Any suggestions on a test procedure ? As simple as unplug the power and start to measure resistance between hot and ground ?
thanks, Bob