Install THIS Transfer Switch to Run Your Furnace on Backup Generator Power
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- Опубліковано 10 лют 2025
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Thanks!
Thanks, really appreciate the tip!
The furnace starts and then stops because it fails its (pilot) flame test during startup. There's a part called a "flame sensor" or "flame rectifier" that is energized with AC voltage and sits in the pilot flame. The pilot flame conducts a small current, and rectifies it. The return path for that small current is the grounded chassis of the furnace. The controller checks if a) the flame sensor current is detected, and b) that it's rectified (i.e. it's looking for a small dc current between the flame sensor and ground). If the flame test fails then the furnace shuts down. For that to work the furnace has to be grounded properly. Meaning that neutral and ground are bonded in one place. If neutral and ground are not bonded at all, then the ground is floating w.r.t. neutral and the flame sensor won't work reliably. If neutral and ground are bonded in more than one place then you'll get ground loops and the flame sensor also won't work reliably. If your generator has a bonded neutral then you need to switch the neutral at the transfer switch (or else you have multipe neutral-ground bonding points). If you generator does not have a bonded neutral then you don't need to switch your netural, but you do need to make sure that generator's netural and ground are connected through to your distribution panel's neutral and ground (because that's where the netural is bonded). If your generator does not have a bonded neutral and you do switch the neutral then you'll have no netural-ground bond anywhere, ground will be floating w.r.t. neutral, and that won't work either.
super helpful
The problem is that neutral bonding plug is illegal. Neutral can ONLY be bonded at the main panel..
@@kevincrawford8957He switched the neutral in his transfer switch and his portable generator was unbonded. He had no bond anywhere. I don't know what the electric codes have to say about that. There are many pitfalls here for the naive.
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What a great comprehensive lesson. I consider implementing that. Thanks a lot!
By installing the ground / neutral plug could there be a chance of backflow power through the ground wire? If I use a generator with the ground neutral plug, do I have to add a separate ground wire from the generator to a grounded rod outside?
By installing the ground / neutral plug could there be a chance of backflow power through the ground wire?
Appreciate the info on the neutral bonding plug. I have an EcoFlow and you are correct, my Ecoflow shows Open Ground when I plug it into my EcoFlow.
Do not use a neutral bonding plug, illegal
@@kevincrawford8957 Found out my furnace doesn't need it anyway, so I don't use it.
If you wanted a few things on the transfer switch, say the furnace, fridge and waterheater, would you need a higher amp transfer switch? im looking into this myself and might want 3 things on the switch. also looking at using the honda e2200i
Those three items would likely be on three separate circuits, each requiring a separate transfer switch...or something like this: www.amazon.com/dp/B005FQJD7K
Also, If your water heater is electric, it's going to require a lot more power than a 2000-watt generator can provide.
This was incredibly helpful. In my case I'd b eusing a PHEV with a 110 volt outlet and I'd have the problem as the solar generator you showed. Thanks for the heads up.
I set this up next to my breaker box and an alternative to installing the neutral bonding plug is to tie all the neutrals (two from the switch and one from the furnace) together inside the breaker box and attaching them to the neutral bar there. Explained as the C. option in the transfer switch instructions. This worked for me when I came across the open ground issue on my generator...
So I've heard of this method. I've also read that it can be problematic for two reasons 1) it backfeeds currrent on the neutral which may be dangerous to utility line workers and 2) it could trip GFCIs in-between the generator/equipment
@@aaronstestlab Good to know.Thanks for the informative video. Very well done...
Wow, I have never seen the switch anywhere but connected directly to the furnace
Any chance to get a link to that holder you designed for the bonding plug?
Here u go: www.thingiverse.com/thing:6446340
I'll use your link to get me another one for my upstairs funace. I may not need it as there is an unused terminal on the rocker DPDT switch. This is what I did and tested already on the downstairs furnace. First, I am using a Champion Dual Fuel 2500 watt inverter generator with floating neutral. The only wires that are switched are the blacks - the center black connector goes to the furnace and is switchable from the line to generator black wires on the other two terminals. The White Neutrals are connected with all the other white neutrals... i.e. the neutral from generator tied direct back to the line incoming white from both the panel, so all whites are tied together. The grounds are done in a similar same way. Ground from furnace cabinet and ground from generator and ground from line side are joined together. The furance cabinet is basically bonded to the panel and the ground pin on the generator. In essence, it becomes a bonded ground generator by tying all the grounds together in the switch box including back to generators ground (making it bonded). When not in use, I use a "dummy'" femaie plug so near zero chance of having any live wires from furnace and/or panel hot. All the wires are tucked away and out of sight until needed to connect genny again. The other company (with the green box- and very proud of their product) is essentially wired the same way as the one you have. I *do* like the green light which indicates it's on generator is a nice touch. (all for about 1/2 as much as the other branded one and you've got a good rubber cover for that deceivingly open 3 pin connector) Thanks for the links!
Thanks, appreciate the support!
If possible, I would leave an existing switch either before or after the transfer switch.
Prior to would likely e the best choice, especially if the breaker or means of disconnecting utility power to the circuit is far away. This permits diagnostic troubleshooting of the transfer switch to be done w/o running back to the breaker panel.
Also… I’m not sure, but I’d guess the power inlet provides a means of disconnect for the powered item.
(in addition to the integral DPDT rocker switch and/or the old/existing disconnect switch, if you left that installed’p)
And… I always try to install a commercial 2-pole spec. grade switch at the boiler or furnace and an additional switch at the entry to the area the boiler or furnace is located. This permits a service technician to kill power at the boiler and/or the homeowner to kill power from a distance. The distant switch comes in handy when there is fire or hazard in the boiler area.
There exists a wide variety of disconnect switch PLATES.
single gang / double gang / 4” square 1900 / utility box cover / and more
Red in color with white printing:
“Emergency” / “Emergency Oil Burner” / “Emergency Gas Burner” / “Emergency Oil Heat” / etc…
Also, if wiring an alternate and distant disconnect switch, always run power TO the distant switch and from that, feed the boiler/furnace. Do NOT run a 2-cond(14/2 or 12/2 etc) and just switch the “hot” line conductor. A bunch of safety issues and w/o the neutral, EMF & RFI generation is huge on that wire run.
Thanks!
⚠️ Quick Note…. I heard a rumor that this product is using the ETL listing for the power inlet as the listing # for the fully assembled product. The inlet device was manufactured by another company and supposedly all components are made by others and assembled into the single “transfer switch” device. It does have some nice reviews and is supposedly easier to wire up than the other small competing devices. (The original “green plate” and copy of that - the “purple plate” switch are a bit cramped. They are based around a 1900 4” square utility plate)
(IMHO - ETL is nothing close to UL - Underwriter Labs in the USA.
Overall, from everything I’ve seen and heard for decades now, UL is much more stringent with their testing and listing processes.
Also - in certain situations , the “trick” of bonding the “neutral” ungrounded conductor to the EGC equipment ground might be contrary to applicable codes. Please use extreme caution when modifying any electrical device unless your capable and qualified.
I’m not currently working in the field, but i am an EE and was a licensed electrical contractor doing NFPA compliance testing for fire detection and alerting systems.
Thank you for reviewing this
+ great channel!
I think that ETL is where manufacturer's go when they know UL would never list their equipment.
Power keeps going out so I’m going to do this. Thanks for finding the open ground issue. That would have been confusing.
I have one question on your video beginning at @4:10 _begins with "another little secret....."_ - something to do with the *'quick disconect"* where it shows you removing a wire. Could you explain that... I must have missed something
Exactly what I needed to know. Thank you
Could you use this switch on a hot water heater as well?
If the water heater uses 240 volts then this would not work.
For the same amount of work you could install an interlock kit and energize additional circuits (fridge, freezer, sump pump, lights, etc).
Heck yes i love this 😀 love it man keeping up with the good work
What if you needed it to be for floating neutral generator? Would you just remove 1 of the neutral wires from the transfer switch and hook up 1 neutral to the neutral bus? In the breaker panel
The green face transfer switch unit comes with instructions for this so you do not switch the neutral. Works great with my Honda EU200i generator which has a floating neutral.
I typically will use a grounding rod, with my generator. Would I still get an open ground indication, if I install this switch?
Yes, adding a ground rod doesn't bond the neutral
@@aaronstestlab Thanks!
I've Rheem Gas Furnace Model R92PA0601317MSA, and I want to use Milwaukee SKU: 3300R ROLL-ON 7200W/3600W 2.5kWh Power Supply. Will this Transfer Switch work?
Ihave a 50 amp inlet box with interlock being installed for a Duromax 9000 inverter generator, that should run my central air and heat, correct or would I need to install one of these and use the bonding plug?
I honestly don’t know.
The 50 amp inlet will run everything in the house, so you do not need this for your furnace. You would only need this for your furnace if you want to turn off the large generator at night and just run a small quiet generator or power station to run just the furnace at night.
So..... if power is out wouldn't the power to the Thermostat also be out... what would tell the furnace circuit board hey time to turn on?
Thermostats are powered via a low voltage cable from the furnace. So, power the furnace and you also power the thermostat.
Many thermostats are also powered by batteries.
If you didn't connect the white wire on switch to load and just connect the 3 whites, load , feed and generator together and just tape off the 2nd white wire on transfer switch all should be ok . Then forget putting that bonding device on the Generator . Leave gen as floating neutral . Agree or disagree !
Honestly I don't know what would even happen if you did that. But, at a minimum you'd end up backfeeding current on the neutral to the utility. Something you want to avoid and one reason both wires are disconnected.
in Canada and must be same in U.S. neutral bonding can only be at one end. So a floating neutral gen would have to hooked this way. Bonded gen could go directly to load. Good conversation.@@aaronstestlab
Does it switch neutral ?
Of course
@@aaronstestlabintruction manual didn't say so😅
I was watching some videos of people doing highly-suspect el-cheapo versions of this, and knew that there was no way I'd set up such mickey mouse wiring solutions. This switch was exactly what I was looking for.
Nice, good luck
Very good info
Why use all that extra hardware. Just wire up the heater with a three prong cord plugged into an outlet. Power goes out, just run a cord from your generator and plug the heater into it. Super simple and a whole lot cheaper.
Good idea, provided the outlet was switched.
@ why would it need to be switched? You’re not going to unplug it unless the power goes out. The outlet will be dead. Once the power comes back on just plug it back in. The circuit only runs a circuit board and a fan motor. Not much of a load.
Code requires a disconnecting means near the furnace. Whether a plug satisfies that I have no idea. Would still wire one just to avoid any inspection hassles. Also, just thought of another potential issue. By using a transfer switch you maintain continuity with the structure’s ground. You’d lose that by unplugging.
@ I worked as a residential electrician for 20 years. We always roughed in an outlet with a single yoke plug for the gas heaters. When it came time to trim out the house we were the ones to install the cord to the heaters. Every single one was inspected and passed by the city inspectors. Once the heater is unplugged there is no reason or code that says it needs to be grounded. But if that is your concern, the metal gas lines are required to be “BONDED” to the grounding system at the main panel. Since the metal gas line feeds the heater!!!!!?
@@MacDa-yy8xnmy old furnace already has a socket up in the attic that it is plugged into. When you unplug it the furnace powers off. Can I hook this plug straight into a generator to power my furnace if my power goes out?
I believe ALL inverter generators are going to have a pure sign waive and that’s why you look for the word inverter when purchasing or don’t buy
I don't know about that. My truck bed has a 120v outlet that supposedly inverter-powered and it's a stepped wave.
Then it’s not a true inverter generator
If the vast majority of customers will use that box with typical 12 or 14 gage wiring, why don't they just make that box for 1/2" bushings instead of 3/4"?!!
Probably so they can sell it in as many markets as possible, knowing the end user can adapt it
Yes, yes yes what a cheap simple fix but do you realize why they leave the neutral and grounds unbonded on generators and power inverter generators because you’re supposed to technically ground your generator to a ground rod outside that’s more safer. A lot of people on here are doing what I call cheat stuff you know And although it may work at first and it may work on all these items sooner or later, it’s not gonna work for somebody else. There’s a reason why everything is left unbonded on these inverter generators and generators essentially in general like I said they want you to ground your generator or your inverter generator Which should be usually buy a solid copper wire like they do from your electrical panel that runs usually a ground rod. Every house usually has one 8 foot down in the ground, copper or aluminum, depending how old Home is, but don’t take my advice.
Using a proper transfer switch and extension cord bonds the generator to the home's ground wiring.
Great video but that background music is totally annoying...
or you could add a power cable on your furnace for about $5.00
Don't need it !
Hi sir, Your video content is good, I hope we can have a chance to chat.