dstang97
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On 120v only I'm getting 60v each on L1+L2. This is putting a meter on the ground stud and terminals. I'm not great with electrical but I'm thinking this is wrong.
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I'm guessing L2 is the neutral. L1+L2=120vMeasure from Neutral to L-1.
Where is the neutral on these generators? 120v onlyThat is odd. I run mine in the 240 single phase mode to give me 2 120 volt legs just like my house.
120v 1ph L1=60v L2=60v (L1 to N, L2 to N)
240v 1ph L1=120v L2=120v (L1 to N, L2 to N)
What is your power volt readings at the courtesy outlets?
If you plan on connecting this to your house when your power is out it will need to be set to 240V 1Ph to power your house.I only want to talk about 120v configuration
Is the neutral and ground tied together? If so I'm getting correct voltage.
This is exactly what I came up with today. Does my wiring look right?Neutral and ground are not "Tied." What are your voltages at the courtesy outlets?
Again, in 120V 1ph:
L1-L0=60v
L2-L0=60v
L3-L0=0v
L1-L2=120V
That's why I thought something was wrong because you don't get 60v in commercial power.Here is a drawing. Generator is not tapped to a neutral in 120v mode which I find as odd but it's the way I understand it. It's for 16bView attachment 661863
I would have never guessed you would get 60vac from each leg to get 120vac. Learn something new everyday
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