UPDATE: I made an appointment with a service facility to let them look at the AC. I brought the coach to the house yesterday, to prepare for the trip to service facility today. I decided to give it one more look myself.
I got the correct documents for my AC model from the Airxcel site. There is an 8-amp fuse inline in the condensor blower high-speed wire. That fuse was blown. I replaced it and everything now works correctly. I cancelled the service appointment this morning.
That fuse is optional, and not shown on all the wiring diagrams, even for my model. Apparently, what happens is that the condensor fan motor has two totally seperate circuits for high and low speeds. When the thermostat set point is one degree lower than ambient, only AC circuit #1 is called for and the condensor fan runs on low speed. When the thermostat set point is two or more degrees below ambient, both cooling circuits #1 & #2 are demanded. The condensor fan low-speed circuit shuts off, there is a brief delay, then the high-speed circuit is activated. Since the fuse was blown, there was no high speed available so the fan just stopped. If the inside ambient temperature dropped to within one degree of the thermostat set point, the high-speed circuit dropped out and low-speed was re-activated. That would make the condensor fan come on again. Strange way to setup a fan, but I guess it was designed to minimize electrical load.
Thanks to all who replied and helped me with this problem. I hope this info helps someone else with a problem someday.
gfs1943
USAF, Retired (1962 - 1983)
2006 Monaco Diplomat 40PRQ
2006 Honda CR-V