Forum Discussion
- MrWizardModeratorI like happy endings
- Getup_ngoExplorerThanks, everyone. I ended up replacing both the front & bdrm TVs with Samsungs. I managed to fit a 40" smart TV in the living room. Yay! (Late at night I was able to hijack the park's wifi to watch Netflix.)
Truly spoiled now. - Chuck_thehammerExploreranything designed for 12 volt DC.. knows it will see 15 volts during a charge cycle and will handle it without issue...
for any 12 volt battery to be changed.. voltage MUST be over 13.6 to do REAL charging.. even at 2 amps.. otherwise it will take days if not weeks.
as a television, Radio, LED lights... all work between 11.5 to 16 volts, DC and filtered. and YES a battery being charged is also a Filter to its devices.
within reason. - wa8yxmExplorer IIIFirst: There is no such thing as an RV specific TV.. Just some that are marketed that way but are really no differnet than the house model.
THERE ARE, however, TV's that are designed to run on 12 or 14 VDC (my Samsung is 14VDC) from a "power Brick" (Actually we call those converters in another space in the RV) If you plan on boondocking, one of these might be of interest.
Some folks worry that the 13.6 Volt (normal) or 14.6 (Charging) voltage of the RV power system is too high for a 12 volt.. And to that I comment my Samsung is 14 volt.. WOrks well with 12 but handles the higher voltages well too., - TechWriterExplorer
MrWizard wrote:
Use any TV that will fit the space,
Mmmmmmm . . . I suggest OP makes sure whatever he buys has a QAM or "digital" tuner as some campgrounds have digital cable.
New TVs are only required to have OTA ATSC tuners. QAM tuners are optional. - Bill___KateExplorerI have no relationship with RiteAid besides being a customer once in a while. I picked up this 19" TV today for just under $80 including tax. You have to have their discount card, but that is free, and only takes a few minutes to sign up for one. It is powered by a "power brick" that plugs into the wall, but actually operates on 12v DC. It is pretty easy to spice a lighter socket plug into the wire, and run the TV directly from the battery when you don't have electric hookups - cheaper and more efficient than an inverter. I had a very similar 13" model for over 6 years that did the job.
Craig TV - tenbearExplorer
pyoung47 wrote:
I have a 19 inch that uses a 12 volt wall wart. I can power it from the battery when off grid. Bought it at Wal Mart.
I replaced my old CRT TV with a modern 22" with a 12v wall wart. Being a completely different shape and size I mounted it where I wanted it and now we use the old TV cabinet for other things.
Being 12v it is easy to find a 12v power source, any light will do, especially if you have replaced the incandescent lights with LEDs. I don't use the wall wart anymore. - joebedfordNomad IIWe have a Samsung 40" in our LR and I'm very impressed with it.
The other 3 are no names but they're OK (except the outside one is useless in the daytime). - rockhillmanorExplorer
Fizz wrote:
There has to be a way to mount it on a good swivel/tilt bracket.
That's what I did.
There is a forum member (can't find the pix) that did something so simple to mount a TV. He got piano hinge and mounted it on the end of the first in line upper cabinet. Swings out to any angle you need depending where you are sitting and swings back the other way to be completely out of the way for travel.
and this one:
Albeit it was in a bay door but look at the simple parts he bought to extend and swivel the TV in different directions Same could be used inside too. Sorry I don't have forum members name for this pix to give credit where credit is due for this DIY! - JagtechExplorer
About RV Must Haves
Have a product you cannot live without? Share it with the community!8,793 PostsLatest Activity: Feb 08, 2025