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dakisgirls's avatar
dakisgirls
Explorer
Feb 06, 2018

Typical electrical usage

Hi there! I am new to these forums and would love some advice on a situation we are having. My boyfriend and I are using our in-laws property to house our fifth wheel while we renovate. It is a 1994 fifth wheel, 34 feet. For the past 3 months, we have had our rig plugged into a normal 120v house circuit using an appropriate extension cord. Our rig is 30 amps. We weren't informed at first (but thats beside the point), but my in-laws are claiming that having our rig plugged in "quadruples" their electric bill. The fridge is broken, we are never running any lights when not inside, and only have 2 small dehumidifiers running inside, and even then those shut off automatically when full. No appliances like microwave or anything else have been used. A space heater was for maybe 10 hours total over the 3 months, but I still don't see how this could account for this much extra power. So I guess my question is- does this seem possible to you all? and if its absolutely wrong how do I gain proof my rig isnt causing this raise in price (mind you, this is the 1st winter they have lived in the house..... they have baseboard heat and the wintertime and cold months coincide perfectly with when we moved the fifth wheel over there..... lol.)? My mother in-law was saying how she heard that when you plug into a normal house outlet you use 3x as much power or something. Im sorry for my lack of terminology, I have literally no frame of reference for this lol. Thanks for reading!!!

36 Replies

  • 2003silverado wrote:
    Maybe help them with the electric bill to keep them pacified, then when you move out and the electric bill doesn't go down (if they are still using heat) they will know it wasn't you.

    That's a good idea. I'm guessing when the bills stay the same or go back up next winter, the in-laws will be convinced the fifth wheel 'did' something to their electrical system.
  • Even if you had a dead short in the RV you still can't go over 15 amps(1800 watts) without blowing the circuit breaker. As Troubledwaters pointed out keeping the peace is also important. An electrician visit to both check your usage and explain how electricity is billed to all of you would be a good neutral ground.
    Are you using the house washer, dryer, shower, tub, micro, oven, lights, etc?
    You stated that this is their first winter in the house, the Electric company can provide prior usage numbers for comparison.
    I would pay half the bill and move on. Also, what does the child of this woman have to say? Sounds to me like you are without backup here.
  • You mention they have base board heat and I'm assuming it's electric, which is by far the most inefficient way to heat. You say this is the first winter they have lived there, and if they moved out of a house with gas heat they certainly would get a rude awakening when they got their first electric bill, and it just so happens it was the same time you parked your rig there.

    Maybe help them with the electric bill to keep them pacified, then when you move out and the electric bill doesn't go down (if they are still using heat) they will know it wasn't you.

    Hopefully you don't move out in April when they stop using heat and they will think they are right and will have to wait until next winter to see the spike again.
  • So how much is it worth to you per month to keep peace or is this worth it to you to do battle with the possible out come of you not being able to keep your 5th wheel there anymore?
  • My mother in-law was saying how she heard that when you plug into a normal house outlet you use 3x as much power or something.


    It is hard to argue with a statement like that, which contains no factual information at all. Your MIL may have a totally different grievance that she can not / will not address, and this is the "outlet" she chose.

    Or the "spike" they observe is always there in the winter - they just never looked in the past when your camper was not there. We use natural gas for heating and hot water. The consumption of January can be 30x the reading of July.

    The previous poster's suggestion to add your own meter may not help whan your in-laws want to believe otherwise. But it will give you an exact knowledge of how much you actually use.

    Do your in-laws get electric bills that state the actual consumption and the meter readings at the time? You should be able to compare the current usage to last year's, when your camper was not there. At least you should be able to calculate a daily average, which you can easily compare with current meter reading. Then unplug for a day or two...
  • If you are plugged into a regular 15 amp household circuit, get yourself one of these Hard to know how much power used by guessing, much better to have an exact figure.
    Art.