cancel
Showing results forย 
Search instead forย 
Did you mean:ย 

Pole voltage VS EMS Voltage

AUwing2
Explorer
Explorer
Well if it's July, I must be discussing power issues at the campground . . .

Lately, we've been experiencing voltage issues which the Progressive EMS has been seeing and shutting down power until it's happy. Talked again with the campground owner who's listening but skeptical that an issue exists. Last year, he brought in an electrician who found and corrected a lot of loose connections. That took care of the low voltage but the occasional high voltage continued. This past week seems high voltage has been the rule and the system cuts down any time of the day or night.

The same electrician came back today saying the power at the pole was fine and wondered if the issue isn't in my trailer electrical. One think he pointed to was the 122V measured at the pole and 128V flashing on my EMS display. Any idea why we'd see higher voltage at the rig compared to the post? This is a 50amp hardwired EMS that has had a Hum since installed in 2015 - it this normal?
17 REPLIES 17

afidel
Explorer II
Explorer II
Also you really, really want to use an all plastic (or plastic and ceramic) trimpot adjuster of the appropriate size. My worst encounter with electricity was adjusting a trimpot in a Sun LC workstation (like an early iMac, computer and monitor together), screwdriver slipped and hit the fly transformer and I went flying several feet and hit the wall, screwdriver had a chunk taken out where it partially vaporized. You might not get thrown by the innards of the EMS, but worse 240V can make you clench up and with 50A coursing through you it's unlikely you're heart would go undamaged.
2019 Dutchman Kodiak 293RLSL
2015 GMC 1500 Sierra 4x4 5.3 3.42 full bed
Equalizer 10k WDH

wnjj
Explorer II
Explorer II
AUwing2 wrote:
Thanks - I appreciate the responses and help thinking this thru. I'll call Progressive for a calibration procedure.

I agree there's a poor neutral somewhere that's the culprit. The electrician is a local small town guy and may not be a master. Nice enough guy but a bit defensive of his prior work "cleaning-up" the system. I need to up my skill to help trouble shoot the open / bad neutral.

troubleshooting the source of the issue . . .
If I connect to 20 or 30A, I should see equal voltage on the Progressive display correct? (20A & 30A having a single load that's shared by the 2 loads on my 50A trailer)


Make sure the poor neutral isn't your cord. Measure both legs at the pedistal and then hook up and measure both in your panel.

With a dog bone on 20 or 30A, yes both sides should match or your unit needs calibrated.

WA4HTZ
Explorer
Explorer
Sound Guy's picture shows the trim pot very well for his 30 Amp EMS. On my 50 Amp unit there are two identical trim pots. If you look closely at the picture just to the left of the trim pot, you can see where there is a place for the second pot on the circuit board. On my 50, that spot is populated. Oh, and my contactor doesn't hum but it sure makes a heck of a CLUNK when the time delay expires!

Ken
Ken and Jeannette
2015 FunFinder 266KIRB - Traded in
2006 Ford F-250 "Super" Cab Long Bed - Traded in

2018 Winnebago Fuse 23A

pianotuna
Nomad II
Nomad II
Thanks for the picture Sound Guy
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

AUwing2
Explorer
Explorer
SoundGuy wrote:

I've not opened a 50 amp version but there would either be a similar dual trim pot or perhaps two separate pots, one for each leg. However, I wouldn't fool with this unless using a calibrated meter, otherwise you'd just be guessing. ๐Ÿ˜‰


Thanks for the picture and advise. Mine in buried behind stairs, panels and the converter so there's no way I'm going in without a calibrated VM and well understood instructions. To my calibrated ear, the hum is no different today than it was a couple years ago when I installed it. Installed a 30A EMS on our previous trailer and never knew it was there - unless it detected something it didn't like of course.

AUwing2
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks - I appreciate the responses and help thinking this thru. I'll call Progressive for a calibration procedure.

I agree there's a poor neutral somewhere that's the culprit. The electrician is a local small town guy and may not be a master. Nice enough guy but a bit defensive of his prior work "cleaning-up" the system. I need to up my skill to help trouble shoot the open / bad neutral.

troubleshooting the source of the issue . . .
If I connect to 20 or 30A, I should see equal voltage on the Progressive display correct? (20A & 30A having a single load that's shared by the 2 loads on my 50A trailer)

SoundGuy
Explorer
Explorer
neschultz wrote:
My hard wired 30 A EMS had the same symptoms from day 1. It always displayed 4 volts higher than the actual voltage. They told me how to adjust the unit to read the same as the input voltage. Maybe yours just needs this adjustment or maybe its bad. Can't help with the hum.


Hum is merely the contactor (relay) ... carefully cleaning the contacts may reduce hum somewhat but it's nothing to be concerned about. I've located mine under the sofa and recently I've noticed it a little noisier than in the past so one of these days I'll clean those contacts with an eraser to see if that helps.

I calibrated my own EMS-HW30C - blue trim pot as shown on the lower left in this pic.



I've not opened a 50 amp version but there would either be a similar dual trim pot or perhaps two separate pots, one for each leg. However, I wouldn't fool with this unless using a calibrated meter, otherwise you'd just be guessing. ๐Ÿ˜‰
2012 Silverado 1500 Crew Cab
2014 Coachmen Freedom Express 192RBS
2003 Fleetwood Yuma * 2008 K-Z Spree 240BH-LX
2007 TrailCruiser C21RBH * 2000 Fleetwood Santa Fe
1998 Jayco 10UD * 1969 Coleman CT380

wa8yxm
Explorer III
Explorer III
There is a possibility that the EMS is "Off" somehow.. Low posibility but still there. Compare readings on the EMS display when another voltmeter.

You said the park had LOW voltage issues.. but they took care of that. now you have HIGH voltage issues.....

Here is how that happened.. The campground's wiring is what I call Anemic, it's not up to carrying the full load of the campers there.. THUS the voltage loss in teh wires causes LOW VOLTAGE when you load it down.

THe park applied to the power company for a higher voltage "Tap" on the transformer.. This means that now under load you get the proper voltage. but when the load goes down your voltage is too HIGH.. It is still the park's fault but to catch it you need a recording voltmeter.. Something the power company can provide. but they may charge.
Home was where I park it. but alas the.
2005 Damon Intruder 377 Alas declared a total loss
after a semi "nicked" it. Still have the radios
Kenwood TS-2000, ICOM ID-5100, ID-51A+2, ID-880 REF030C most times

Second_Chance
Explorer II
Explorer II
I've never noticed a hum from our P.I. 50 amp hard-wired unit - but it's installed behind the electrical panel in the bottom of the buffet. When the weather got hot this summer, we started having problems with the system cutting out for low voltage (below 104 volts)... always on one leg. This happened at two different parks. Upon investigation, I discovered that both ACs - one 15K, one 13.5K - we on the same leg of the RV 50 amp service. I juggled breakers and put them on separate legs and haven't had a problem since. We've not had high voltage issues, so can't speak to that.

Rob
U.S. Army retired
2020 Solitude 310GK-R
MORryde IS, disc brakes, solar, DP windows
(Previously in a Reflection 337RLS)
2012 F350 CC DRW Lariat 6.7
Full-time since 8/2015

Old-Biscuit
Explorer III
Explorer III
Progressive Industries Hardwired EMS/Surge Protectors

Each unit includes a digital display, scrolling continuously through the power source information: Voltage(s), current, frequency, error code, and previous error code (if applicable).


Information for BOTH legs
First L1
Then L2


Voltage measured at power pole.......
Did 'electrician' measure L1 to Ground, L1 to Neutral, L2 to ground, L2 to Neutral, L1 to L2 ???

Or just measure ONE leg and call it good?





Got access to a different 50A source......??
Measure the voltage at receptacle and compare that with your EMS Display
Is it time for your medication or mine?


2007 DODGE 3500 QC SRW 5.9L CTD In-Bed 'quiet gen'
2007 HitchHiker II 32.5 UKTG 2000W Xantex Inverter
US NAVY------USS Decatur DDG31

Searching_Ut
Explorer
Explorer
wnjj wrote:
time2roll wrote:
AUwing2 wrote:
Any idea why we'd see higher voltage at the rig compared to the post? This is a 50amp hardwired EMS that has had a Hum since installed in 2015 - it this normal?
That is a poor neutral connection somewhere and an unbalanced load. Really need to verify using same meter in both places.
Master electrician knows this straight away.


Agree with this. The EMS is likely reporting the opposite leg from the one measured at the pole. Is there a way for the EMS to display both sides? I'd bet the other side is 122V, making them average 125V.

Maybe I'm assuming too much. When you say 50A, I assume you mean your RV has 50A split with a 4-pin plug? If not, disregard the above.


Now I'm trying to remember the sequence the Progressive EMS display steps through on my trailer. As I recall, it steps through displaying voltage, current and frequency for both legs. I don't have access to check it out right now.
2015 Ram 3500 Laramie CTD, 4X4, AISIN, B&W Companion Puck Mount
2016 Heartland Bighorn 3270RS, 1kw solar with Trimetric and dual SC2030, 600 watt and 2k inverters.

ExxWhy
Explorer
Explorer
I have a 30 amp EMS.

I called about the hum, they say it is normal. It's the relay inside the box that hums when energized.

wnjj
Explorer II
Explorer II
time2roll wrote:
AUwing2 wrote:
Any idea why we'd see higher voltage at the rig compared to the post? This is a 50amp hardwired EMS that has had a Hum since installed in 2015 - it this normal?
That is a poor neutral connection somewhere and an unbalanced load. Really need to verify using same meter in both places.
Master electrician knows this straight away.


Agree with this. The EMS is likely reporting the opposite leg from the one measured at the pole. Is there a way for the EMS to display both sides? I'd bet the other side is 122V, making them average 125V.

Maybe I'm assuming too much. When you say 50A, I assume you mean your RV has 50A split with a 4-pin plug? If not, disregard the above.

time2roll
Nomad
Nomad
AUwing2 wrote:
Any idea why we'd see higher voltage at the rig compared to the post? This is a 50amp hardwired EMS that has had a Hum since installed in 2015 - it this normal?
That is a poor neutral connection somewhere and an unbalanced load. Really need to verify using same meter in both places.
Master electrician knows this straight away.