Forum Discussion
- Kayteg1Explorer IINice way of making simple things sound complicated ;)
- Yes and when the MH is running down the road the 12v comes from the alternator powered by the main engine.
Still the furnace does not run on gasoline/diesel. Just 12v and propane. - BobboExplorer II
Kayteg1 wrote:
Nice way of making simple things sound complicated ;)
Yes, but at least it was not wrong. - Kayteg1Explorer II
Bobbo wrote:
Kayteg1 wrote:
Nice way of making simple things sound complicated ;)
Yes, but at least it was not wrong.
Sayz who?
The furnace, while having hookups is using 120V that is converted to 12V.
Still the source of power is 120V. - BobboExplorer II
Kayteg1 wrote:
Bobbo wrote:
Kayteg1 wrote:
Nice way of making simple things sound complicated ;)
Yes, but at least it was not wrong.
Sayz who?
The furnace, while having hookups is using 120V that is converted to 12V.
Still the source of power is 120V.
Sayz who? The furnace manual. Look at page 3.
The "source of power" may be 120v, but the furnace only sees 12v of that.
Following your "source of power" rationale, they are actually 12,000v RVs.
12v to furnace from converter. 120v to converter from house breaker panel. 240v to house breaker panel from utility company step down transformer. 12,000v to utility company step down transformer. So, the "source of power" is actually 12,000v.
You can't trace power back that way.
The furnace is 12v. If you don't believe me, hook up a 120v power wire to your furnace and report back what happens. - Kayteg1Explorer IIYou don't want to see the big picture.
Converted voltage is converted voltage, still it is the source that should count.
If you want to split hair, often furnace has build in converter what supply 3-5V to control board.
So following your logic you can say that furnace runs on 5V.
Than RV converters give about 14V not 12. - Old-BiscuitExplorer III
Kayteg1 wrote:
You don't want to see the big picture.
Converted voltage is converted voltage, still it is the source that should count.
If you want to split hair, often furnace has build in transformer what supply 3-5V to control board.
So following your logic you can say that furnace runs on 5V.
Not a Suburban or Atwood RV Furnace.
They do have a transformer but that boosts voltage to 10K for spark electrode
RV Furnaces operate on 12V DC power...regardless - GasmanExplorerIt is just amazing how so many of these simple questions turn into a pissing match about who is smarter.
- rgoldingExplorer
Gasman wrote:
It is just amazing how so many of these simple questions turn into a pissing match about who is smarter.
I was just thinking the same thing.
Our a/c units have heat exchangers, so they do work as a furnace. Nice but noisy. We use 2 spacer heaters for heat source on nasty, wet, damp days like today. Keeps the chill off. If its below freezing, we do cycle furnace to keep stuff warm below, but space heaters for local comfort.
We also use an extra 20amp circuit on a surge protector power outlet off the power post in the campground. That way we can run 2 space heaters and not trip a breaker. - Boon_DockerExplorer III
Gasman wrote:
It is just amazing how so many of these simple questions turn into a pissing match about who is smarter.
Just too many arm chair engineers on this forum. :B
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