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littleboots's avatar
littleboots
Explorer
Sep 11, 2014

Where to start. AC breaker trips... HELP

I have a 2006 Redline travel trailer. Its left at our vacation place by the Colorado River. It's plugged into 30amp power.

The problem is last time we went down the AC didn't work (and it was 112 degrees.. lucky me). When I turned the AC off at the breaker but turned the fan on, the AC fan would run but of course no cold air. The second I switched the AC on the 20amp breaker in the breaker cabinet would trip. I could reset it and breaker would hold with AC off but the second I clicked the AC on it would trip. Fridge and all other lights worked flawlessly so Im stumped on where to start. I was thinking of replacing the breaker as that has happened at my house where dust/dirt etc got in the breaker and caused it to trip easier. The batteries aren't new and I noticed the converter fan running pretty consistently. My thought is that power is obviously getting to the breaker so it should be between the breaker and the AC

Any and all assistance is appreciated.

Thanks again
  • Where would I locate the start capacitor? I don't want to here it's the compressor. I just ran the AC for the entire weekend the weekend before. The AC is out in the heat day in and day out so it could have finally kicked the bucket. If it is AC is there a recommendation to which one is better than others?

    Secondly, do I put the amp meter on the breaker output side to test it? I have an amp meter but not familiar with electricity enough to know how to check it.
  • I agree with jamnw, check the start capacitor. It's more likely then the compressor and it's a $100 fix versus a $1200 fix.
  • I'm not an AC man, but isn't there a start capacitor on these? If it was bad, then it could cause this.
  • I'd say compressor locked up. When mine did that, I replaced the 13.5 with a 15.0 for the extra cooling power.
  • Unfortunately, it sounds like your compressor may have locked up.

    I agree with DougE. Get an ammeter and check the load but I have a bad feeling you may be looking at a new AC. You can try to have the compressor replaced, but with labor and all it's usually cheaper to just replace the AC. I'm so sorry to hear that. I'm sure it isn't what you wanted to hear.

    Best of luck.
  • Could be the breaker and I'd try that first since you don't have an amp meter to check the load. But it's probably time to replace the A/C. The circuit is probably OK or you wouldn't be able to run the A/C fan by itself.