โSep-21-2014 09:09 AM
โSep-23-2014 08:08 AM
โSep-22-2014 06:38 PM
โSep-22-2014 11:13 AM
โSep-22-2014 11:10 AM
โSep-22-2014 11:03 AM
โSep-22-2014 10:53 AM
โSep-22-2014 10:46 AM
โSep-22-2014 10:35 AM
versicom wrote:
what I mean by smoking is simply it burns up and 12v item I plug into the outlet.
Please give an example of what burned up...?
I am a computer engineer and quite capable with a multimeter. It should not be producing an overload when connected. It is clear to me that the outlet is getting to much voltage. I plan to rewire the socket which will not be an easy job as I do not know where the wires run. The owners manual came with no wiring schematics.
โSep-22-2014 09:58 AM
โSep-22-2014 09:53 AM
versicom wrote:Common on many auto ranging multimeters to go to a overload reading momentarily while switching to the correct range. And it is diffidently not a spike, its the meter.
Upon connecting the multimeter, I get a 20v "overload" spike and then 1 second later drops to 12.8v.
โSep-22-2014 07:59 AM
โSep-21-2014 10:15 PM
โSep-21-2014 10:59 AM
โSep-21-2014 10:28 AM
ScottG wrote:
Depending on your converter, it may have been in a desulfate mode for the batteries. I would go back and check it again.