- Sep 25, 2016
- 1,215
- Boat Info
- 300 Sundancer 1994, trailered tri-axle LoadRite roller
- Engines
- Mercruiser 5.7 260HP Alpha One Gen II, twin
Here is the markings on a marina style it’s a 15A but a 30 would have the same 30ma markings
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@Skybolt That's had me stumped! I've been confused as to how the breakers are all off and something that's "off" could be causing it to trip. Thanks so much for offering that explanation! I'll try to find the bus bar as well as I go through making the schematic.
Just went to the boat and did the above. When the shore power is set to on but all the switches are off, the resistance is over limit. As soon as I switch on the 30 AMP A/C main (the one in the video that makes the dock's circuit breaker trip) I start reading a resistance of 5.56MΩ.
It's pretty dark over here so I didn't do anything else but my plan is to disconnect the generator neutral next and see if that makes any change. If not, I'll start working through the circuits on the panel one at a time.
Thanks for the tips! I did measure between those two arrows. I know earlier you mentioned disconnecting the generator neutral. Should I still try or is that not necessary with the measurement I made?
But if I had to guess on what's wrong, that 65vac part of the main breaker is tying the neutral and ground together. As a test you could lift the white wire from the ground and see if the main breaker can be turned on and not pop the breaker. Don't turn any of the other breakers on.
Resistance between the Hot (black) and ground also needs to be measured with the circuit breakers off, the dock line connected to the boat but not connected to the dock power.
GFI devices measure the differential current between the Hot and Neutral legs. If the current on the Hot and Neutral conductors is not equal and the differential is greater than the GFI rating the GFI will trip.
A Hot leg leaking to ground can establish a differential like a neutral leaking to ground. Anything creating an imbalance in current between the Hot and Neutral will trip the GFI.
Wasn't that a different boat and thread on the 65V tripping device?I suggested to measure with the main circuit breaker on, because I believe the issue is the main breaker and the piece that measures the 65v between ground and neutral. I have no practical experience with that type of breaker. But that may be what is causing the dock GFCI to pop when the main breaker is on. Much like having two gfci's on the same circuit. Just a guess at this point.
Wasn't that a different boat and thread on the 65V tripping device?
This boat is tripping the dock GFI.
Or did I miss something?
You may be right, but look at the pic of the panel, post #23. The ground and neutral are being switched by the main breaker, or at least it looks that way. To me, it looks like the same type of breaker, given the boats age. If not then I have no idea what type of breaker that is.
This was the image from the other thread -Hold on everyone stop!
Didn't we just have a thread with an older boat and the same setup?
This is a two pole breaker with the third section is a "shunt trip coil".
The coil is wired across Neutral and Ground intentionally.
It is an automatic circuit trip if there is a Reverse Polarity situation.
So this coil is wired just like the RP lamp.
But instead of illuminating it shuts off the main breaker (if RP)
This was a very old school design...
Like the lamp I would disconnect one side with the lamp and test again.
Hold on everyone stop!
Didn't we just have a thread with an older boat and the same setup?
This is a two pole breaker with the third section is a "shunt trip coil".
The coil is wired across Neutral and Ground intentionally.
It is an automatic circuit trip if there is a Reverse Polarity situation.
So this coil is wired just like the RP lamp.
But instead of illuminating it shuts off the main breaker (if RP)
This was a very old school design...
Like the lamp I would disconnect one side with the lamp and test again.
Hi @hughespat57 I have labeled the RP lamp. Should I disconnect just the black (hot / #3 in my pic) wire and try what I did in the video to see if the dock's circuit breaker still trips?
See attached.Hi @hughespat57 I have labeled the RP lamp. Should I disconnect just the black (hot) wire and try what I did in the video to see if the dock's circuit breaker still trips?
Almost same, but I would remove the green at the block, just because its easy and that will remove the coil AND the pilot light for RP.If that is indeed a Shunt Trip device then remove the white wire as shown and see if the dock GFCI continues to trip.
View attachment 154536