mongo
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That would be worse since the truck would still be sitting at the local neutral potential, but there is only one return path from truck to house so higher resistance and higher voltage.A possible solution is to not connect the ground between the truck and the panel, this would prevent the split current. What sort of danger would this cause? Given that the neutral and ground is still connected at the home panel, a fault in the branch circuit would still flow through the ground back to neutral and trip the branch breaker. A fault at the truck side would still short the shell to ground to neutral through the truck's bond and trip whatever breaker there is. Is that a solution?
Removing the neutral connection and putting a 120/240 auto transformer at the house would address the issue. Oh right, that is how Powershare does it, so maybe neutral-ground is always there since the NACS port has no neutral?
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