โJun-17-2018 06:51 PM
โJul-03-2018 11:30 AM
DrewE wrote:
Basically correct, but it's inaccurate to call it a 100A service. It is a 50A 120V/240V split phase service. None of the wires or connections ever have 100A flowing, and you don't need wire sized to carry 100A, and you cannot power a single 100A 120V device should you happen to have such a beast. You can use up to 50A at 240V, or have two legs of 50A at 120V, but not a single leg at 100A.
Similarly, a semi tractor pulling dual 28' trailers is not a truck with a 56' trailer. The two are far from equivalent if you have some 35' long pipes to haul.
โJul-01-2018 08:35 AM
โJun-28-2018 01:57 PM
SoundGuy wrote:
It's handy also to be able to monitor incoming source voltage throughout your stay, just as I do with this Kill-a-Watt meter plugged into a galley receptacle.
Bipeflier wrote:
I invested in a Kill-a-Watt a few years ago. Second summer while camping I noticed a higher than normal voltage reading. Pulled out the trusty Fluke meter and voltage on the same outlet read normal.
I called the company and was told that "something has changed" inside the unit. Might read high or low. Well - - Duh! " No repair available, you just need to buy a new one."
Nope, Progressive Dynamics EMS for me now!
โJun-28-2018 01:48 PM
CavemanCharlie wrote:
My only concern with the newer Gray Metal buried units is that the cheap metal is going to be rusted out in a few years. The old post style , though not up to today's code and can not handle today's loads, were around for decades.
In just a few years the buried metal ones are going to be junk and need to replace the metal boxes. Though the wires will still be good.
โJun-28-2018 12:50 PM
SoundGuy wrote:
It's handy also to be able to monitor incoming source voltage throughout your stay, just as I do with this Kill-a-Watt meter plugged into a galley receptacle.
โJun-27-2018 06:14 PM
myredracer wrote:pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
I use a hair dryer to check voltage under load.
Would you care to elaborate about how campgrounds used to be wired vs how it is now?myredracer wrote:
Checking a pedestal's voltage before plugging in or even backing into a site is not a bad idea but realize that you're testing open circuit voltage and it could drop out of sight with a load on it. Low voltage is common, esp. during the summer heat and in older CGs (due to how they used to wire them).
Nowadays they use those gray metal, direct burial enclosures like in the 1st photo. They have 125 or 200 amp feed-through lugs and by NEC demand rules, can have up to 6 or 7 pedestals (going by memory here on a run of 200 amp wire/cable back to the distribution transformer. Because of "diversity" (not all loads operating a full or high demand loads at the same time), the voltage drop at any one pedestal can be significantly reduced. If you happened to be the only site on a run of loop-fed pedestals, you could have a 30 or 50 amp RV fed by 200 amp wire. These loop-fed pedestals are more efficient electrically and cost less overall to install.
In the olden days, they still had distribution transformers (those pad-mounted boxes you'll see around a CG) but they had panels (100 or 200 amps) mounted on posts distributed around a CG and individual 30 amp or 50 amp runs to pedestals. "Pedestals" were a 30 or 50 amp recept. (and a 20 amp GFCI) and breakers in an enclosure similar to the 2nd photo mounted on a wood post. Sometimes there can be 2 or 3 of these pedestals combined on a run of heavier gauge wire which can serve 2 side-side sites or be some distance away from each other. I've seen some of these older pedestals with a single 30 amp run of #10 quite a distance from the panels. These older pedestals are wired in a "star" configuration in comparison with today's loop-fed design. There's also a lot of variation in exactly how they were wired.
An issue with older CGs is all the 50 amp RVs that are being sold these days. The 50 amp RVs use an adapter but can easily draw loads up to 30 amps, whereas most 30 amp RV owners are used to conserving power and maybe draw 15-20 amps at most on average. The 2017 edition of the NEC has substantially increased the demand load requirement for 50 amp RVs too.
Prior to 2005, the NEC only required 5% of CGs to have 50 amp pedestals (unless they voluntarily built above code min.). So in older CGs you can have a LOT of 50 amp RVs running off 50-30 amp adapters and drawing significantly more power than the original code demand allowance which will also exacerbate voltage problems.
If you pull into an older CG and have a choice of sites, it can sometimes help to pick one closest to a transformer or panel instead of ending up at the farthest end of a run.
Worst CG wiring I've seen was at a CG in Oregon where they had individual #10 romex runs strung overhead between the trees and then an outlet dangling below. Def. not good voltage and def. not to code.
Hope this explains it well enough. A drawing might be better if I had one. If you've ever seen a guy opening panels in a CG and taking photos and notes, that was probably me... ๐
โJun-27-2018 04:52 PM
โJun-27-2018 11:18 AM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
I use a hair dryer to check voltage under load.
Would you care to elaborate about how campgrounds used to be wired vs how it is now?myredracer wrote:
Checking a pedestal's voltage before plugging in or even backing into a site is not a bad idea but realize that you're testing open circuit voltage and it could drop out of sight with a load on it. Low voltage is common, esp. during the summer heat and in older CGs (due to how they used to wire them).
โJun-27-2018 07:34 AM
myredracer wrote:
Checking a pedestal's voltage before plugging in or even backing into a site is not a bad idea but realize that you're testing open circuit voltage and it could drop out of sight with a load on it. Low voltage is common, esp. during the summer heat and in older CGs (due to how they used to wire them).
โJun-27-2018 05:47 AM
โJun-27-2018 03:57 AM
โJun-19-2018 04:35 PM
โJun-19-2018 11:59 AM
time2roll wrote:
If you have a 50 amp RV you need a custom adapter that checks both.
EMS protection is always best.
โJun-19-2018 10:41 AM