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2012Coleman's avatar
2012Coleman
Explorer II
Sep 07, 2018

30 Amp Plug Diagram

A while back, I was having a 30 amp plug installed at my home, and someone posted a great wiring diagram. I've tried searching for it in my posts but can't find it - even with the advanced search, searching the archives.

The reason is that I need to give it to a friend who just bought a used 2018 TT and now that it is home, he is having trouble with the AC. I went to the inspection with him and it was working fine.

The previous owner of his home had a nice RV parking spot set up with a plug. My friend said that he couldn't plug in because the receptacle was wrong - so he went and bought the correct one for a 30 amp RV plug and installed it himself.

So during his first driveway camping adventure, he stated that the AC started making funny noises and dripping cold water and not cooling so great, which sounds like the coil was freezing up.

I'm no expert, but I'm thinking that the voltage/wiring is wrong. I told him to have it checked out, but having that diagram would be helpful.

Am I on the right track as to what the issue could be?

13 Replies

  • 2012Coleman wrote:
    The previous owner of his home had a nice RV parking spot set up with a plug. My friend said that he couldn't plug in because the receptacle was wrong - so he went and bought the correct one for a 30 amp RV plug and installed it himself.

    So during his first driveway camping adventure, he stated that the AC started making funny noises and dripping cold water and not cooling so great, which sounds like the coil was freezing up.

    I'm no expert, but I'm thinking that the voltage/wiring is wrong. I told him to have it checked out, but having that diagram would be helpful.


    Doubtful source wiring is the cause of his A/C issue - it's either right or it's wrong and if the latter then the A/C not working will be the least of his problems. :( Power any rig incorrectly and there's sure to be problems, not just with the A/C but just about anything electrical. Amazing how so many will fool with electricity when they clearly don't know what they're doing. :E :h



  • Air conditioners are suppose to drip, and if the humidity is high, yes, they can drip a lot.

    Weird noises from the air conditioner could be a result of LOW voltage.

    Freezing up means the air conditioner is simply set too cold initially and will run constantly, non stop (compressor). The compressor needs to cycle on and off which gives the fins a chance to thaw with ambient heat. If the humidity is very high and the air conditioner runs non-stop, they can ice up. Simple solution is to set the thermostat so the air conditioner just turns on. Let it cycle till it turns itself off. Wait a few minutes and then lower the thermostat till it kicks on again. Wait for it to shut off, then lower the the thermostat a pinch again. Repeat this, giving the compressor and the fins a chance to "thaw". I had this happen only once in my previous camper, and it happened once in our house. Ever since, I've been a little less aggressive when initially turning on the air conditioners. See if that helps.

    However, if it's icing up, you won't have dripping.
  • google is always good.

    https://www.google.com/search?q=installing+a+30+amp+service+in+home+for+rv&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-b-1-ab