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vanswey's avatar
vanswey
Explorer
Jul 04, 2020

Melting wires

I have a 2018 Springdale 24bhwe and my Dometic air conditioner just stopped working. I bought the trailer brand new and have used it for a total if 30 nights.

Everything was running fine then I noticed the breaker at the campsite had tripped. I thot nothing of it and reset the breaker and the trailer worked perfectly again. About 6 hours later the ac stopped working. I checked the campsite breaker and it had not tripped so I opened the fuse panel in the trailer to see if the breaker had tripped which it did not. However I looked at the wires going into the buss and a lot of them looked charred or melted. Any ideas how this would happen? Thank you!!

  • Agree, loose wires and low voltage, either one can cause that sort of damage. That is why the caution above that warranty might be denied unless you can prove installation error, which is going to be tough.

    Either way, it is imperative that you get any melted/burned wires replaced, as they are now their very own fire hazard.

    Given the horror stories about bad electricity at campgrounds, folks should at the very least have a volt meter to check and preferably monitor the power pedestal. A surge protector or even better, an auto former, is a good idea.

    While you are at it, don't forget a water pressure regulator. One campground we stayed at warned everyone at checkin that the city water supplier insisted on delivering water at 150 psi, and not to hook up unless you had a regulator, as that pressure will burst every line in your RV. At another campground we were assigned a site at the bottom of the mountain, with their water supply at the top. The pressure from our hydrant was so high the nozzle-less white hose shot a stream of water a good 50 feet. I dunno what the pressure was, but it was well over the 80 psi RV plumbing is rated for.
  • pianotuna wrote:
    loose wires and low voltage at the campsite.

    Time to ask about warranty since rv is new.

    Have the dealership "discover" the issue.


    Ask but expect them to tell you it's operator error unless you can prove it was a faulty installation.

    Did you check the voltage? Particularly on hot holiday weekends, it's common to get low voltage as the park is full and everyone is drawing a lot of power to run air/con units.

    Yesterday the pedestal we are on went down to 96v. That will burn out electrical systems if you don't take action.

    We have an autoformer that boosts the voltage the trailer sees by 10% but even that wasn't enough, so we pulled the generator out and got it back up to 118v until early evening when the voltage was back up.
  • pianotuna wrote:
    loose wires and low voltage at the campsite.

    Time to ask about warranty since rv is new.

    Have the dealership "discover" the issue.


    Loose wires will overheat
  • loose wires and low voltage at the campsite.

    Time to ask about warranty since rv is new.

    Have the dealership "discover" the issue.
  • Improperly tightened wire connections. Loose causing poor connections generating a lot of heat. Dangerous. If you're not 100% comfortable working with 120 volt AC wiring, get a professional to check it out.

    Ken