Here is a great explanation and diagrams of a generator hookup.
From this site:
Generator Grounding
I saw this, printed it off and am studying it.
There is way too little information here to answer your question, and you really should start your own thread instead of reviving a year old thread.
As to answering your question, I would say it does not sound very safe on the surface, instead consider getting a pin and sleeve female connector and a pair of matching male connectors. Wire one up to supply your future 3 phase grounded with neutral bonded distribution panel, and the other to feed to a common solid neutral transfer switch at your house when in 120/240V split single phase mode. Either way leaves the generator frame grounded only and the neutral bond jumper removed.
This way you can leave the generator set for 120/240 1 phase and the house cable plugged in for normal standby, and when you want to use your 3 phase equipment, simply unplug the house, flip the connection switch to 120/208 3 phase and plug in the 3 phase distribution panel, then unplug and flip the switch back to 120/240 1 phase for standby mode.
Ike
p.s. I would not use a common 120/240 twist lock like an L14-30 for this as people will expect it to always be 120/240 with standard wiring, a pin and sleeve industrial connector will make most people stop and think before plugging in.
thanks for The Idea. I will invest in the appropriate, safe connectors capable of handling the current and correct number of conductors. I am thinking and pondering your explanation and am researching connectors and conductors. THaniks for your help!
If you have to ask you should hire an electrician. That is my advice. I do not understand 3 phase power enough to play with it. A wise man knows his limitations.
Definitely, Of course I will have a Master Electrician do the transfer switch and cabling. It is just that I want to be skooled up on this and get what I want and not sold stuff I don't need while I'm paying sparky $80.00 an hour.
I worked maintenance for a resort and pros installed a 3 phase well sump pump and it would only pump 5 feet out of a 3 inch pipe. I told them it had 2 legs wired backwards ant hey told me I didn't know S%*T. After a day of limited water supply during demand of the resort, sparky came back and switched 2 of the legs and shazam, water squirted 50 feet. Pump was runnin backwards. I learned you can reverse direction of a motor by reversing legs but it will burn them out and could have spun the impeller off. But the efficiency is low and it will burn the motor out.
I ask because there are people who know and I like to find out.
So why does 3 phase act like the pump example?
Inquiring minds want to know.
I just asked so I know what to look for
Technically no. You need a five conductor cable and connectors, three phases, neutral and ground.
Again, technically no. You need a four conductor cable, and connectors. Two hot, neutral and ground.
Appropriate grounding circuit consists of a conductor from the generator's frame to the building's ground. Any other configuration leaves the specter of a generator with voltage on the frame. That is why you need five conductors for three phase, and four for single phase.
Basically you can have two connectors however if they are not the same connector you run the (serious) risk that the wrong connector will be used at the wrong time. I have two connectors on my MEP-004A, however they are identical so that it doesn't matter what they are connected to. (I have both dual transfer panels in the house, and dual breakout boxes when running mobile.) And, yes, my cables and connectors are five conductor/five pin.
For single phase you need something like a NEMA 14-30 (or any 14-xx of sufficient current carrying capacity, as the 30 is amperage.) For three phase you would probably use a NEMA L21-30P, or any L21-xx where xx is the current capacity of the connector. (I use two NEMA L21-30 connectors...)
Thankyou, Thankyou for the explanation. The grounding is of utmost critical importance as well as the proper installation of the transfer switch to isolate the generator and it's power from the utility poles. again, thanks
I also want an "extension cord" approach to plugging in 3 phase machinery and the proper 5 conductor looks to be an appropriate way to do it. but the 3 phase machine will have the chassis grounded through the 5 conductor as well as a copper rod driven into the ground for the genset and another for the 3 phase machine.
I see for my single phase transfer switch installation the 4 conductor will have a chassis ground through the 4rth conductor but I will still install a copper rod for the genset and I presume the house has a copper some where as well.
I have not even started the genset yet but it is a 2007 rebuild and has 6 hours on it so I'm optimistically sure it will work. I am saying that I am patient and want it done right and safe.
I just want the wiring proper so everybody is safe and not doing this
.
Thanks all
Dennis