Forum Discussion

ebjet123's avatar
ebjet123
Explorer
May 10, 2019

30 amp to 15/20 amp adapters

I have seen many "dogbone" adapters that will plug into a 30 amp outlet allowing you to plug in any 110 cord or appliance. My concern is the circuit is rated for 30 amps. Unless you have a dead short downline, that 30 amp breaker is not going to trip leaving any 110 appliance vulnerable to damage or worse yet, a fire. I have not seen any 30 to 15 amp adapters with inline circuit breaker protection. Can you use this adapter then plug in a 110 GFCI adapter (that any big box store sells) between the 30 amp adapter and the appliance you are attempting to run thus having a "protected" circuit? Or will the male end of the GFCI be vulnerable because it is being fed 30 amps thus overloading that connection? It still is not the same as having a 15 amp breaker between the 30 amp adapter and the appliance you are plugging in as you would with a standard circuit panel box. Any thoughts?

46 Replies

  • I never use a 30 amp to 20 amp adapter except the one that one of my friends has. He used a 30 amp RV extension cord for the male end and a circuit breaker box with 2-20 amp breakers and 20 amp outlets built into it on the other end.
  • Guess i am kinda slow this am. Really cold not figure out exactly what the OP intends to do. :h
  • cavie wrote:
    FYI electric language. US and Canada uses 120/240 voltage systems. Campgrounds use 50 amp 120/240 volt systems. 30 amp 120 volt systems and 20 amp 120 volt systems. 115 volt and 15 amp (language) systems went away long ago. You seem to have two threads going so you will need to read both.

    As for adaptors there are many. The first # designates from and the second # designates to. 50/30. That is 50 amp 240 plug to 30 amp 120 volt plug. Only one leg of the 50 amps is applied to the 30 amp cord.

    30/50 is just the reverse of that. 30 amp 120 is applied to both 50 amp legs to the RV 50 amp main breaker. Only 30 amps 120 volts is available. Go over 30 amps and the Ped breaker will trip.


    The OP seems to be talking about a reverse adapter. 30 IN and 15 plug out. NOT the standard 15 in and adapt to the RV 30 amp cord. Now, you say you are an electrician. I find your post troubling, IF we are talking about a 15 to 30 plug adapter. I have never seen 20 to 30 or 30 to 20 adapters. They may make them, but in 40 years I have never seen one or had a customer with one. 20 amp plug ends have a horizontal pin where 15 amp ends both pins are vertical. They may have 30 to 20, but I have never seen one. The WEAKEST point when adapting down to 15 amp wall receptacle is THAT wall receptacle. It is only rated at 15 amp current and you cannot just increase the Breaker at the Main Breaker box to a 20 or 30 amp breaker to run higher than 15 amp current. The wiring from the Breaker box is also rarely rated higher than 15 amp. Now, the OP seems to be concerned if I read his post correctly, he adapts from a CG 30 amp receptacle down to 15 amp plug(NOT connected to an RV?) and he is concerned that since he HAS 30 amp supply, what happens downstream if the appliance or cords have a short that would trip a 15 amp breaker but will overload if on a 30 amp breaker and possibly cause a fire or burn up the appliance. Doug
  • FYI electric language. US and Canada uses 120/240 voltage systems. Campgrounds use 50 amp 120/240 volt systems. 30 amp 120 volt systems and 20 amp 120 volt systems. 115 volt and 15 amp (language) systems went away long ago. You seem to have two threads going so you will need to read both.

    As for adaptors there are many. The first # designates from and the second # designates to. 50/30. That is 50 amp 240 plug to 30 amp 120 volt plug. Only one leg of the 50 amps is applied to the 30 amp cord.

    30/50 is just the reverse of that. 30 amp 120 is applied to both 50 amp legs to the RV 50 amp main breaker. Only 30 amps 120 volts is available. Go over 30 amps and the Ped breaker will trip.
  • The use of a dog bone adapter is primarily for plugging in an RV not an alliance. When you plug in your 20/30 dog bone into your house, 20 amps is applied to you 30 amp cord and is run to your 30 amp main breaker in your RV. The 20 amp breaker in you house just became your RV main breaker. You will have full access to anything in your RV as long as the total amperage used does not exceed 20 amps.

    You really would not have a need to go 30/20. If you were doing that then yes you would leave what ever is plugged in exposed to a 30 amp breaker.

    The flip side is if you use a 50/30 adaptor. You can plug your 30 amp RV into a 50 amp plug BUT you are protected my the 30 amp main breaker in your RV. Only 1 hot leg of the 240 50 amp service is applied to your Rv.

    If you are so inclined you can install a 20 amp GFI device before the appliance. I am an electrician but I would not be bothered to do that. But that is just me. Camp ground usually have a 20 amp GFI outlet available so I don't see the need to adapt down 30/20.

About Technical Issues

Having RV issues? Connect with others who have been in your shoes.24,260 PostsLatest Activity: Jun 07, 2025