Rhodewaves
Veteran Member
Every time I go to a marina that has redone there shore power using the new 30 amp outlets with GFI breaker , they keep popping when I plug in my boat , I’m fine using a non GFI shore power. Any ideas
What I found was the onboard breaker panel had the ground bus and the neutral bus connected. Separating them solved the problem.
If you only have one 30 amp inlet then I would unhook it from shorepower and turn everything off. Then ohm between neutral and ground. It should be open or no connection. If it is open then turn on circuits one at a time and see if there is a connection on any of the circuits.
What I have seen with boats from the 80s with 2 shore power inlets is that they put all the neutrals on one bus bar. It worked then but it won’t work now with the newly wired docks.
We found 4 problems that would trip the GFCI. His neutrals were all on one bus bar. His 2 voltmeters were daisy chained with the neutrals from one shore power. One of his outlets had been replaced by a PO and they swapped the neutral and ground on the outlet. And his water heater had a ground to neutral short....
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The last one of these I dealt with was 3 days ago. There was no observed problem, it was a survey item, fault current measured on the shore Ground. Below, the Ground connections of a transformer installed on a very high end yacht by a supposedly reputable outfit. You see all three grounds on the case stud, and 330 Ma on the meter. The incoming ground wire from the dock gets connected to the transformer shield, the two small ones, and that connection isolated from the case and ship's Ground. Note that the Neutral and Ground are not connected. This is one of those exceptions noted. The boat is equipped with Ground Fault monitoring and one N-G connection for all sources is at the switchboard through a sensing device. This is common on inspected vessels.