In 2019 I added a second air conditioner to my 30A Class C. The A/C was added on a completely separate 110V-20A circuit from the RV. The idea was to plug the RV into the 30A and the A/C into the 20A outlets at the RV park pedestals. Since this isn't always reliable, I looked for another method using the 50A outlet. The trouble was that a 50A to 2 x 30A dogbone over fused the A/C, and possibly the RV itself since each leg provides 30A and the breaker might not flip until 50A. Dogbones of all types provide no fuse/breaker protect. I asked for help from the forum and got several replies, but never built a 50A-30A-20A conversion box since there would have been multiple boxes and cables. Recently I found the exact all-in-one box that I needed. The Connecticut Electric CESMPSC41GRHR Power Outlet box sold at Home Depot provides a 30A-110V and 20A-110V breakers for the 30A and 20A GFCI outlets in the box. I called the company on the number listed on their website and tech support was very helpful. I ordered the box on Amazon. I bought some 4 wire cable (AWG 8-600V-black/red/white/green) from Home Depot. I wired it to a 50A-110V RV plug purchased at my RV store. I wired the black to the 30A-110V breaker pole, the red to the 20A-110V breaker pole, the white to the neutral bus lug, and the green to the ground bus lug. The box comes with a wiring diagram affixed to the inside cover. I wanted to go through the top rather than use the knockouts so I bought a hub for the top of the box to insert the cable and a cable clamp so the cable could not be pulled from the box. The entire process took about an hour after all the parts were gathered. It should be noted that this box does not protect against high or low voltage, only against over-fusing. You'll need a surgeguard with a voltage regulator for that. This was a simple project for someone who is accustomed to working with electricity. For those that aren't familiar, I'd advise finding an electrician to wire the box for you. Electricity can be deadly.