Sep-13-2017 08:53 PM
Sep-14-2017 07:46 AM
time2roll wrote:
That picture seems to have a problem with addition.
'electric doctor photos' needs to take an actual measurement instead of just creating graphics from stray images.
Sep-14-2017 07:44 AM
enblethen wrote:
GFI breaker.
Disconnect the neutral from breaker and connect it to the neutral buss. Disconnect smaller neutral from breaker that goes to neutral buss.
Sep-14-2017 07:41 AM
Busskipper wrote:Tom N wrote:
50 AMP RV WIRING
50 AMP HOT TUB/RANGE/WELDER WIRING
NOTE: THEY ARE IDENTICAL
Tom, W3TLN
Yes will be interesting to see if he has the same - as his picture is only of the FUSE BOX.
14-50R NEMA receptacle is 4 wire, rated at 50-Amp 125/250-Volt
This is what is needed and if wired correctly should be fine - The Ground Fault thing is not something that I would think should be there in the Fuse Box.
But will leave that to the "Real" electrician, which you should consult with.
Sep-14-2017 07:32 AM
Sep-14-2017 07:18 AM
Tom N wrote:
50 AMP RV WIRING
50 AMP HOT TUB/RANGE/WELDER WIRING
NOTE: THEY ARE IDENTICAL
Tom, W3TLN
Sep-14-2017 06:54 AM
Sep-14-2017 06:47 AM
azdryheat wrote:
Your house 50 amp is different than an RV 50 amp. Your house runs two hot leads and a ground while the RV runs two hots, a neutral, and a ground. What an RV circuit actually is is two 120 volt separate circuits. Nothing in your RV requires the 240 volts your house delivers. You RV only needs 120 volts. Your RV fuse box will be divided into two separate 110 circuits.
Sep-14-2017 06:42 AM
Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow
Sep-14-2017 06:40 AM
Sep-14-2017 06:05 AM
azdryheat wrote:
Your house 50 amp is different than an RV 50 amp. Your house runs two hot leads and a ground while the RV runs two hots, a neutral, and a ground. What an RV circuit actually is is two 120 volt separate circuits. Nothing in your RV requires the 240 volts your house delivers. You RV only needs 120 volts. Your RV fuse box will be divided into two separate 110 circuits.
Sep-14-2017 06:02 AM
azdryheat wrote:
Your house 50 amp is different than an RV 50 amp. Your house runs two hot leads and a ground while the RV runs two hots, a neutral, and a ground. What an RV circuit actually is is two 120 volt separate circuits. Nothing in your RV requires the 240 volts your house delivers. You RV only needs 120 volts. Your RV fuse box will be divided into two separate 110 circuits.
Sep-14-2017 05:02 AM
Sep-13-2017 09:38 PM
Sep-13-2017 09:22 PM
Sep-13-2017 09:09 PM