Nov-22-2019 11:01 AM
Nov-24-2019 08:24 PM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi ependydad,
I'm in a 30 amp class C.
I have a 30 amp male to 15 amp female adapter. I check the polarity. Then plug in a kill-a-watt meter. I plug an electric heater into the kill-a-watt. I let it run for a few minutes, monitoring the voltage.
I have a break out box for 50 amp--and can load both legs, measuring voltage on each.
If all is well, I plug in the RV. If voltage under load is low, I add the autoformer. I've never seen high voltage.
I don't find many folks here who are smarmy, most folks just want reliable information. Thanks for asking how I do voltage under load. I hope my answer is clear.
In the bad old days, when I did not have a hybrid inverter/charger, if voltage was low, I'd plug in only the converter. Then I'd plug the rest of the RV into the inverter. That would let me run the microwave, induction cooker, water heater, and air conditioner (one at a time--inverter was only 2500 watts). Of course the use was limited by the capacity of the battery bank--which at the time was 875 amp-hours @ 12 volts.ependydad wrote:pianotuna wrote:
I always check voltage under load before I plug in my RV.
I’m not being smarmy, but how do you check voltage under load without plugging in?
Nov-24-2019 06:34 PM
ependydad wrote:pianotuna wrote:
I always check voltage under load before I plug in my RV.
I’m not being smarmy, but how do you check voltage under load without plugging in?
Nov-23-2019 08:06 PM
pianotuna wrote:
I always check voltage under load before I plug in my RV.
Nov-23-2019 06:10 PM
pianotuna wrote:
cavie,
The reason for the need for protection on 50 amp is because of the possibility of an open neutral which could feed 240 volts through one leg of the RV frying lots of items.
The risk of that happening on 30 amp is far lower.
Check polarity and check voltage under load.
My configuration is (only) surge before autoformer (actually in parallel), then post autoformer limit demand to 24 amps. If more amps are needed, I switch on the hybrid inverter/charger.
Nov-23-2019 06:06 PM
Nov-23-2019 05:49 PM
Nov-23-2019 05:37 PM
cavie wrote:pianotuna wrote:
cavie,
He does not need a stand alone surge device that ONLY covers surges. He needs a top of the line PI or SG, but only if he has 50 amp.
Surge protector can be bought for under $100. EMS goes for around $300. EMS is what you want.
What part of this statement don't you understand?
Nov-23-2019 05:31 PM
pianotuna wrote:
cavie,
He does not need a stand alone surge device that ONLY covers surges. He needs a top of the line PI or SG, but only if he has 50 amp.
Nov-23-2019 01:00 PM
Nov-23-2019 06:26 AM
bertrand wrote:
Because some resort have surcharge of power I'm told I should get a surge protector. Where can I buy one and what brand name should I get? I'm from Vancouver Island, Canada.
Nov-22-2019 05:03 PM
wa8yxm wrote:
TRC (now Southwire) Sure Guard is warrnted for 1 year.
Nov-22-2019 04:48 PM
bertrand wrote:
Because some resort have surcharge of power I'm told I should get a surge protector. Where can I buy one and what brand name should I get? I'm from Vancouver Island, Canada.
Nov-22-2019 03:52 PM
Nov-22-2019 03:14 PM