Ed_Gee wrote:
My, " not much you can do about it " comment was meant to point out that the original poster had little recourse to remedy the situation if the campground manager was in denial... and yes, short of leaving, unplugging from that low voltage system would probably be prudent.
Understand, but my point was that if one has an EMS unit such as a
Progressive Industries EMS-PT30C that has the ability to detect multiple errors with the source supply then it would be darned near impossible for any campground owner, manager, host, maintenance man, etc, to deny there is an issue when the EMS clearly shows that there is. A unit such as the PT30C shows up to 10 error codes and printed in English right on the face of the unit it says exactly what each code means. Measuring with a DVM is fine but try arguing with someone who has no idea what those readings mean and it's a losing battle ... show them what the EMS says and there's no way they can deny there's an issue with the source supply that needs to be fixed.