โJul-09-2017 08:21 AM
โAug-26-2017 07:41 AM
โAug-19-2017 05:01 PM
time2roll wrote:yeah but I'm a vibrating anomaly rolling down the road with nobody watching what I'm doing. Gimme a chance....
Could you pinch some #6 to the frame just right to make fire without tripping a 50 amp breaker?
Doubt it would be easy. Probably take a bit of practice.
โAug-18-2017 04:55 PM
โAug-18-2017 02:49 PM
MrWizard wrote:
I know i would like 'full coverage' of all expense involved
but i think i would not make to big an issue about the cost of the battery
in my line of thinking, it falls into my car was damaged in a crash and they don't want to pay for the spilled gas
the cost of the battery versus the cost of the other repairs
I would consider this, as write off the battery as my loss,
โAug-18-2017 02:46 PM
time2roll wrote:
Could you pinch some #6 to the frame just right to make fire without tripping a 50 amp breaker?
Doubt it would be easy. Probably take a bit of practice.
โAug-18-2017 02:03 PM
โAug-18-2017 01:45 PM
time2roll wrote:give me 12v, a 5A fuse and election of 1/4w resistors and watch the fire I can create. If fuses and breakers prevented fires there would be no need for fire sprinklers
Still a fuse or breaker should open before anything is that hot.
I agree a replacement battery should be part of the covered repair as a burned component.
โAug-18-2017 01:32 PM
โAug-18-2017 01:32 PM
โAug-18-2017 01:22 PM
โAug-18-2017 12:33 PM
โAug-02-2017 06:47 PM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:He said the main feed from the panel to battery was burned. Generally there is a fuse in the breaker panel at the converter source and at the other end is a junk self resetting circuit breaker at the battery source. One guess what failed to stop power when the fault occurred.
I would not trust a trailer that nobody can figure out why the safety systems did not work.
โAug-01-2017 07:04 PM
โAug-01-2017 07:01 PM
jamnw wrote:I'd suggest to remove any circuit breakers and fuse holders that were original. Replace them with adequately sized marine circuit breakers. I have little faith in those auto-resetting breakers in a small tin can.
I just got the call from CW in Biloxi. The warranty company has approved replacing the wiring in my camper. But NOT the battery....
The service agent at CW is shocked they approved the repair because they can't determine the exact cause.
The wiring is burned from the battery to the converter. The feed wires and a lot of the distribution wires. From what I could tell, the 12V feed wires were run with the distribution wires. They appear to have been loosely zip-tied to the metal cross members of the frame. It appears to me the 12V positive feed wire grounded to the frame causing the wire to get hot and catch fire. Why the protection devices at the battery didn't prevent this is a mystery.