I have a question. Why is it bad to leave the jumper in place bonding neutral to ground at the generator when using the generator to power a house? To clarify, I have the following situation.
I have an MEP003A that is trailer mounted and that is connected to my house via a 400 amp manual transfer switch. The transfer switch only switches the L1 and L3 lines and splits them to feed two separate 200 amp panels in the house. The L0 neutral from the generator is not switched, but is permanently wired to the two 200 amp panels in the house, which are tied to a ground rod at the house. I ran 4 wires from the generator, the L1 and L3 lines, the L0 neutral and a separate ground line. The ground line is connected to both the generator and trailer frame and the other end to the ground at the main panel in the house. The jumper is still in place on the generator bonding the neutral to ground. The reason I preferred to leave the jumper in place is that I have a lot of acreage and use the trailer mounted genset to frequently provide power remotely. When I use it remotely, I drive a ground rod in and connect it to the ground lugs on the generator and trailer. The setup has been working very well for over 9 years now and I don't have any kind of interference. When it was installed, which I did myself, the local EMC sent a "generator expert" to approve my installation and the County also sent an inspector out. Both approved the installation, and I'm assuming they knew what they were doing. Is it bad to leave the neutral / ground bond in place at the generator?
Howdy,
By the electrical gods wisdom, you do not want 2 points of ground. The generator expert might not have known exactly what a MEP generator is. You run 4 wires to the house to make 4 connections. I am sure your house service panel has more than 1 ground rod in the ground. So consider that as the master grounding point. If things are wet, and something rubs the wrong way, and you touch the generator metal, the ground bond plate is in place, you have a ground loop, which means a opportunity for you to become the ground.
Can you get away with leaving it? YES
Is it proper? NO
Can you be struck by lightning? YES
Have you? NO
When things go south, you do not want to be the ground.
Can a generator simply run in the field without a ground rod? YES
Is it safe? NO
If you brought out that generator expert and pointed out the bonding strap on the genset, and and really looked over what was connected to where... He would say he made a mistake. And pray no one got hurt due to his mistake.
Now, there is also a whole other world known as permanently mounted genset. This is where a fully automatic transfer switch comes into play, which might switch 4 wires. But that itself is way different from a MEP.