MelissaD wrote:Just read this and thought it was relevant to this discussion RV Electrical Safety: Surge Protectors vs. EMS http://noshockzone.org/rv-electrical-safety-surge-strips/
I read the article and I have the EMS Surge Progressive but the question below puzzles me. Someone asked if they should use rubber gloves to plug in with to avoid shock and this was the answer. I don't understand about the hot skin condition and if when using the Fluke VoltAlert and it shows red is that good?
"Well, in theory if you turn OFF the pedestal circuit breaker BEFORE you PLUG-IN your shore power connector, you can’t get shocked. And if you turn OFF the pedestal breaker BEFORE you UNPLUG your shore power connector, you’re still safe. But everyone please note that if the ground pin in your campsite pedestal has been energized from a reflected hot-skin in another campsite, then the circuit breakers in your own pedestal or RV won’t disconnect you from that hot-skin condition. I think that’s a very rare circumstance, but still possible. That suggests that you should really meter the campsite pedestal plug for proper voltage BEFORE you plug in your RV, then do a quick test for hot-skin condition on your RV using a Fluke VoltAlert. This will take all of an extra two minutes under most conditions. Of course, if you’re trying to make camp in the rain that may be uncomfortable, so if you choose to skip metering the pedestal with a volt-meter, at least you can use a VoltAlert to check your RV for hot-skin as soon as your plug in and turn on the circuit breakers. That only takes 10 seconds at the most, and will probably find 99% of hot-skin conditions."