โOct-06-2014 08:42 AM
โJun-02-2015 08:55 AM
โMay-24-2015 07:45 PM
wildmanbaker wrote:GoneCamping wrote:If you run your 30 amp 115v camper on a 220 volt genset, you will smoke EVERY electrical product on board...
HUH? You telling me the Onan Genset that is onboard my RV will smoke everything? Tell ya what, if my factory installed generator will smoke everything, then it should have already done that 15 years ago.
Thanks for the help guys...
No, what I believe he is saying is that no RV generator produces 220 volts. Your entire RV runs on 120 volts. Even 50 amp Rvs run on 120 volts. Their have been persons on this forum that have supplied their RV with 220 volts by mistake, and cooked everything that was hooked up at the time. They are really trying to help you.
โMay-24-2015 04:00 PM
โMay-23-2015 04:55 PM
wildmanbaker wrote:
No, what I believe he is saying is that no RV generator produces 220 volts.
โMay-23-2015 02:57 PM
GoneCamping wrote:If you run your 30 amp 115v camper on a 220 volt genset, you will smoke EVERY electrical product on board...
HUH? You telling me the Onan Genset that is onboard my RV will smoke everything? Tell ya what, if my factory installed generator will smoke everything, then it should have already done that 15 years ago.
Thanks for the help guys...
โMay-23-2015 01:06 PM
If you run your 30 amp 115v camper on a 220 volt genset, you will smoke EVERY electrical product on board...
โMay-21-2015 11:35 AM
GoneCamping wrote:
May not have been clear about this. It is NOT my intention to use the regular 30 amp shore cord at all, or to modify it in any way. I'm talking about simply not using it all, and instead unplug the coach cord going to the generator (220v 3 prong with locking tab on the neutral prong) and hooking into campground shore power via that cord fitted with 220v/50A shore power plug (instead of the regular 30 amp shore cord). Feeding off the genset 220 line is the only way the coach isolators will allow BOTH A/C units to run at the same time.
Again, I'm not talking about modifying anything at all on the coach, just using the generator 220v power plug into shore source instead of generated source. Should work...
I've wired a number of houses and all have passed electrical inspection, so like I said, I'm not a novice at this.
โMay-21-2015 11:10 AM
โMay-21-2015 11:01 AM
โMay-21-2015 08:57 AM
โMay-21-2015 08:48 AM
โMay-21-2015 08:20 AM
GoneCamping wrote:
Found this thread on a Google search, it pretty much answers my question, though I've got slightly different scenario. First off, I not a novice on electrical wiring, but I'm not licensed and not an electrician either. My scenario is that my Motor Home is a simple 30amp/110v unit. It is equipped with 2 roof air units, and according to the manual can only operate one or the other except under generator power, at which point the system will allow both units to work at the same time.
Now, I will be camping in Cape Hatteras at a place there is no shade, the single unit is unlikely to keep up on a very hot day. So I bought a 50amp plug, and a 3 prong generator style receptacle and some wire. I want to un-plug the coach from the Genset, and plug it into a 50amp cord that I made, but was not 100% sure of whether I needed the ground or not. Since both A/C units are 110v I'll obviously need to have Neutral and the 2 hot wires. I'll just eliminate the ground since there is no ground prong on the coach plug that goes into the Genset. Hopefully this will allow me to run both A/C units at the same time at the campground, guess we'll find out tomorrow afternoon.
โMay-21-2015 07:51 AM
โMay-21-2015 07:50 AM