โOct-07-2013 02:09 PM
โOct-08-2013 07:43 AM
Me Again wrote:cswinford wrote:JamesBr wrote:
I would also say check to see while under this load how hot the converter is getting and if the fan is turning on. I have helped a couple of friends now replace the fan on their converter because after only a few years the fan bearing had siezed up and the converter would shut down for thermal protection.
Once we sourced the proper computer fan (size and voltage) and replace it, none of them have had any issues with the converter.
That's interesting... because honestly, I have never once in the 18 months we've owned this unit heard a fan come on in the converter. Not once...and we lived in the unit for 14 straight months while traveling. I have never messed with the converter so I hadn't expected to hear a fan. I'll look into this.
So it was not the brakes??? Chris
โOct-08-2013 07:23 AM
cswinford wrote:JamesBr wrote:
I would also say check to see while under this load how hot the converter is getting and if the fan is turning on. I have helped a couple of friends now replace the fan on their converter because after only a few years the fan bearing had siezed up and the converter would shut down for thermal protection.
Once we sourced the proper computer fan (size and voltage) and replace it, none of them have had any issues with the converter.
That's interesting... because honestly, I have never once in the 18 months we've owned this unit heard a fan come on in the converter. Not once...and we lived in the unit for 14 straight months while traveling. I have never messed with the converter so I hadn't expected to hear a fan. I'll look into this.
โOct-08-2013 07:04 AM
JamesBr wrote:
I would also say check to see while under this load how hot the converter is getting and if the fan is turning on. I have helped a couple of friends now replace the fan on their converter because after only a few years the fan bearing had siezed up and the converter would shut down for thermal protection.
Once we sourced the proper computer fan (size and voltage) and replace it, none of them have had any issues with the converter.
โOct-08-2013 06:54 AM
โOct-08-2013 06:16 AM
โOct-07-2013 06:33 PM
โOct-07-2013 05:34 PM
cswinford wrote:
Here's an update.
After running for a few hours with the battery completely unhooked and running many of the interior 12 volt lights, all of the sudden all the 12v lights went off. We shut them off, waited a bit, and then turned them back on with no problem. Then the same thing happened again later.
I think the issue is definitely with the converter but maybe its a loose wire or something when it heats up under load.
A couple of people thought it might be the battery not charging but the battery tested at 12.5v, so I don't think that's the issue.
Thanks to all who have replied thus far.
โOct-07-2013 05:33 PM
Artum Snowbird wrote:
I had the same problem exactly. While I was running the truck, the battery would charge, but on shore power it would not.
While plugged in to shore power find your 12 volt wires coming out of the converter and touch them with your finger. Wiggle them and see if the lights suddenly turn bright. In my case, the white wire coming out of the converter was quite hot, the lights flashed when I wiggled the wire up to bright.
It was totally a loose wire connection and nothing else. Sure changing the converter would fix it, because the wires are removed and then replaced and tightened. But all I needed was a screwdriver to fix mine.
โOct-07-2013 04:34 PM
โOct-07-2013 03:57 PM
Artum Snowbird wrote:
I had the same problem exactly. While I was running the truck, the battery would charge, but on shore power it would not.
While plugged in to shore power find your 12 volt wires coming out of the converter and touch them with your finger. Wiggle them and see if the lights suddenly turn bright. In my case, the white wire coming out of the converter was quite hot, the lights flashed when I wiggled the wire up to bright.
It was totally a loose wire connection and nothing else. Sure changing the converter would fix it, because the wires are removed and then replaced and tightened. But all I needed was a screwdriver to fix mine.
โOct-07-2013 03:16 PM
โOct-07-2013 03:01 PM
Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow
โOct-07-2013 02:54 PM
MrVan wrote:
With the symptoms you have described I think you can rule out a blown fuse on the output side of the battery. My guess would be is the battery is not being charged properly by the converter or the battery is failing under high current demand. Since everything seems to work good when you disconnect the battery that would indicate to me that the converter is working properly. When the battery was checked did they check it under load?
If the DC lights and appliances work ok when the battery is not connected that seems to indicate the converter is doing its job but somehow that charge from the converter is not getting to the battery or the battery is bad. I see no reason to replace the converter if it will run the dc stuff without the battery.
โOct-07-2013 02:49 PM
โOct-07-2013 02:41 PM