New 5er, 2 weeks old. 2019 Montana High Country 375FL. I'm still trying to figure out how things work on it. Because of another thread, I decided to do some exploring and self-education on my inverter.
It's located in the pass-through under the front, attached to the ceiling of the compartment upside down. It's hard to see the ends. But I took photos of it and looked at the manual and finally figured out, by touch, where things are.
But here's the gipper, and what I don't understand. After trial and error this is what's happening.
According to the service guys at delivery, the only thing plugged into the inverter is the refrigerator.
So, why are there no lights or read outs on the inverter. Quite obvious after figuring it out, no battery power. The dealer showed me two battery cut off switches. He just pointed them out, didn't explain. Looks like one cut off is to the house, the other is to the inverter.
I flipped the switch and the inverter powered up! Yahoo! Problem solved! Well, not quite. Now I'm really confused about that refrigerator. What's really powering it?
So, step 1. I unplugged shore power and kept the battery cut off for the inverter off. Refrigerator was off.
Step 2. I left shore power unplugged and flipped the battery cut off back on. Refrigerator working, running. Yahoo! This works as expected.
Step 3. Plugged into shore power and left inverter cut off on. Refrigerator working! Yahoo!
Step 4. Plugged into shore power and turned inverter cut off, ON.
Refrigerator still running.
OK, so nothing changed with the refrigerator. It's apparent, when plugged into shore power the refrigerator is running on shore power. It also runs when not plugged into shore power, but receiving power from the battery via the inverter. Yet, I've done nothing with refrigerator, like switching outlets or anything.
So what gives? Is there a system built to detect when there is no shore power and the refrigerator plug knows to switch over to the inverter? That's the only thing I can figure.
I'm glad I figured it out, because up until now, the inverter has been turned off at the battery kill switch. That means the first couple trips we made, the refrigerator was actually off when we were traveling. Since we never opened the refrigerator door while in transit, I didn't catch it that the refrigerator was actually not running. At home, we're plugged into power all the time. So, would have never thought to check. I was just assuming the refrigerator ran off the inverter all the time, plugged into shore power or not?
Any insights here? If this is the way it's suppose to work, that's some pretty creative technology going on there! I love it. It means I won't be running off the battery except when actually in transit.
Thoughts anyone?