I was wondering if anyone might be able to offer me some advice or information to help me resolve two electrical problems - one major and one minor - I recently encountered with my 5th wheel โ a 2008 Cougar Model 291RLS (two โslidesโ โ a main โliving roomโ slide and a second โbedroomโ slide).
(Major) Problem Summary:
Earlier this week, I was in the final stages of leaving home for three weeks of vacation camping โ all hooked up to my TV, landing gear retracted, shore power disconnected and stored, etc. All that was left to do was retract the slides, lock up/retract the stairs, throw the wheel chocks into storage and go.
I started by pressing the rocker switch to first retract the bedroom slide and it started to come in. I waited, as usual, to hear the โnormal, ratcheting clicksโ from the mechanismโs clutch, typically signifying that the slide was fully closed but, for the first time ever, they did not occur. Rather, the motor just โshut off/stoppedโ.
Uh, oh!
Did not like the sound (more precisely, the absence of the โsound) of that.
Got out and checked โ the bedroom slide was fully retracted BUTโฆ
Went back into the trailer and thought Iโd try to reopen the slide and close it again but, as I feared, โNOTHINGโ. No response from the actuator mechanism, โone way or the otherโ.
CRAP! Fear of maybe having to cancel 3 planned weeks of vacation โdependingโ started running through my head.
โLong story shortโ:
I wound up spending the next 5.5 hours trying to (a) determine the cause of the problem and/or (at least) (b) get SOMETHING โjerry-riggedโ working so that I could at least go camping and worry about a final fix upon return.
Hereโs what I learned/determined/did:
1. Now, I should first mention that the Living Room (Main) slide worked/continued to work โjust fineโ. No problemo! And so, as far as I know/can tell, a single 30 amp ATM fuse is used to service both slides so I did not really expect to find any problems there but, nevertheless, I decided to check and, as expected, found no problem โ the (30 amp) fuse in question was just fine.
2. I went even further, by pulling the front cover off the converter and using a voltmeter, checked for 12 volts โdown the positive railโ of all the fuse holders for โ12 voltsโ just to ensure that something had not โgone bump in the nightโ in the converter and that there was really still, measured โstraight to ground' , 12 volts available โTOโ the 30 amp fuse in question. RESULT: all looked normal โ power was there and the fuse was O.K. and capable of passing power on โdownstreamโ.
3. NEXT: decided to check for a bad slide โrockerโ switch. Since I have two slides and thus two switches, this was fairly easy to do by simply removing both switches from the wall, unplugging them from the wiring harness (5 LARGE GAUGE โ at least 10G, maybe 8G wires there - and swapping them. RESULT: no problems detected with the switches. EITHER switch would operate the Main Slide; NEITHER switch would operate the Bedroom Slide.
4. NOW, I SUPPOSE I could have checked for power availability/(wiring) continuity AT the switch(es) BUT I decided not to (yet) โwanted to get going somehow and leave for camping SO: the NEXT thing I decided to do was open up the bed (platform) and check inside it. My primary goal here was to check and see if the slide actuator MOTOR/MECHANISM itself was O.K. and that the slide mechanism was capable of working at all. Once I gained access, I noticed something: ONE of the two wires which โcame into the platform spaceโ to deliver power from โupstreamโ to the slide (motor) had simply been left lying around loose on the floor and the insulation in one spot of ONE of the wires had been worn clear through on some of the metal anchoring the slide mechanism to the bedroom floor. Was I concerned??? Well no, not really, at the time, as I โwanted to get goingโ and the 30 amp fuse was O.K. and the switch was (apparently) O.K. etc. SO I just taped it up and put some wire loom protector around (both) the incoming wires and went โstraight for the motor/actuator mechanismโ.
5. Beyond this, there did not appear to be any obvious problems inside. The connections between the (two) incoming wires and the motor wires looked โfineโ. So, I disconnected the two motor wires from the two incoming (power) ones and โjumperedโ the two slide motor wires directly, using a small 12 volt lead-acid AGM UPS (Uninterruptable Power Supply) battery that I picked up โcheapโ as a โsurplus itemโ for various โbread boarding/bench testingโ projects and Voila! The mechanism โkicked into actionโ and I was able to open and close the slide, as long as I supplied power directly to the motor leads.
I decided to stop my troubleshooting that that point, as I wanted to โget on the roadโ. I put all the wiring back together, but before closing up, added/wired in two short โ about 5โ โ 12 gauge wires which I taped together and brought out under the side of the bed so that I could do the UPS battery โjumpering trickโ without having to open up and get back inside the bed platform to do so.
Then I got on the road, about 7 hours later than I intended, but at least this was not going to โcost meโ my camping vacation plans.
So, thatโs where things currently stand.
When I get back home, Iโm going to have to try and chase down the source of the problem and fix it to get back to the normal and obviously more convenient method of operation.
But, before I say any more about this, Iโd like to mention a second and more minor electrical problem that I also recently encountered on the grounds that the two problems I now have might be in some way related:
(Minor) Problem Summary:
I like LEDs/LED Lighting.
Years ago, one of the very first things I did was replace all the interior incandescent (โ921โ) bulbs with (warm-white, 36 SMD) LED panels -brighter - 145 lux measured/โnormalizedโ to a base of 100 lux for the 921s at 1/7th the current draw. Previously, my converterโs cooling fan, quiet though it is, used to come on when the 7th 921 โfired upโ; now I can turn on every single interior light without it starting. A relatively inexpensive mod, well worth doing! So, recently just for the heck of it, I had an opportunity to pick up a number (20) of 5 LED T10/194 bulb replacements for just over $6.00 so I bought them, intending to replace the 194 incandescents in my trailers Running Lights.
Now, my 5th has a total of 13 โrunning lightsโ:
First, there are a total of 6 AMBER ones: two located at the extreme top right and left hand side of the trailers โfront capโ, and two more located on EACH SIDE of the trailer, one at the front and the 2nd about half way back.
All the rest of the running lights are RED โ two at each of the extreme left and right sides of the trailer at the rear, and five near the roof on the back of the trailer.
In the process of replacing the 194s/running lights, I noticed something. I started at the rear of the trailer. All five went in without a hitch. โDittoโ the extreme rear, RHS red R.L. but, when I went to replace the RHS middle amber RL, I noticed that that bulb was not lit. (I had โdone a trickโ to jumper all the trailers running lights โonโ so that I could ensure that I โgotโ the polarity of the LED replacements right).
O.K., no problem, I thought, just a bad bulb maybe? So I opened it up, inspected the bulb โ looked just fine. Tried an LED. โBoth waysโ (polarity). Nothing. Nada!
Got a voltmeter. Checked for power. NOTHING.
โCrapโ again.
O.K. I thought โ a (one?) bad RL. Will have to get around to looking into it โlaterโ.
Long story short, however: in the course of trying to replace all the 194 RLs with LEDs, I discovered that I had a total of FOUR running lights, ALL โAMBERโ, non-functional, with an INTERESTING โSYMETTRYโ:
(a) BOTH AMBER Front Cap Lights were out, and
(b) BOTH MIDDLE, RHS AND LHS AMBER running lights were also out.
(c) HOWEVER, BOTH RHS AND LHS โFRONTโ AMBER RLs were fineโฆ
So, I did some Googling.
Came across a very interesting and potentially, PROBABLY USEFUL post from Ray Burr of LoveYourRV.com on his โintermittentโ running light problemsโ and how he solved them which I will study further when I get home and try to take on THIS problems as well.
However, I thought Iโd mention IT HERE as maybe??? there is a relationship, a common element between these/MY two (ELECTRICAL) PROBLEMS.
Conclusions/Suggestions/Advice?
I cannot help but wonder if there just might be a common factor in both the above problems. (E.G. โchaffingโ, a fuse, โbad, inappropriate groundโ somewhere?
Itโs a real PITA not to have wiring diagrams/schematics. Anyone KNOW of anything that might be useful?
Specifically with regards to my bedroom slide, since both the motor and the switches seem to be fine and the converter looks to be supplying power to/across the fuse, it looks??? like the problem may/must be in the wiring/connections between the converter and the (BR) switch or (more likely???) the switch and the slide motor/actuator.
Is anyone aware if MAYBE there is another fuse or something โ say a RELAY - BETWEEN (say) the BR slide switch and motor that MIGHT have blown?
(DOESNโT โlook like itโ, judging by the size (gauge) of the wires to/from the switch that are involved. โBeefy wiresโ. But maybe????)
And (again), interesting coincidence with and โsymmetryโ in my running light problemsโฆ
Any thoughts, ideas, suggestions, links, etc. that might help me resolve this problem when I get back home in a couple more weeks would be most welcome.
GM.