โJul-25-2019 07:27 AM
โJul-30-2019 04:10 PM
โJul-30-2019 03:47 PM
โJul-30-2019 01:11 PM
KMLsquared wrote:Yes, there is some misinformation in this thread but you need to know that when it comes to 120/240 volt services, it is incorrect to refer to "phase" and doesn't help the OP. In the electrical industry, the correct terminology is line 1 & line 2 and line to neutral. "Phase" is terminology used in 3-phase power systems.
Man I feel sorry for the op. This thread is like watching the news on tv, confusing and contradictory. Some of the responses are wrong and add to the confusion. Itโs really no wonder this forum is dying. Yes 50 amp is 240 phase to phase and 120 phase to neutral. There, one more response that the op has no idea what is right.
โJul-29-2019 10:04 PM
โJul-29-2019 08:38 PM
โJul-29-2019 08:38 PM
โJul-29-2019 04:50 PM
fj12ryder wrote:
So if someone wired up an RV outlet the same as a welder outlet, and plugged a 50 amp RV plug into it, what would happen? Nothing?
I know I've read about people plugging into an outlet at someone's house and frying their electrics due to running 240 Volts to their 120 appliances. Would that just be a result of the outlet being wired incorrectly, and have nothing to do with the wirer copying a welder outlet?
Am I laboring under a misapprehension here? I know that I lost one leg of my 50 amp service and then had some appliances, lights, and outlets not work.
โJul-29-2019 03:11 PM
fj12ryder wrote:Welder is usually 6-50 outlet and the 14-50 plug will not fit. There is only one way to wire a 14-50 outlet or plug to meet code and no harm will come no matter where it is located. Nothing special about an RV park or at home. Same, same.
So if someone wired up an RV outlet the same as a welder outlet, and plugged a 50 amp RV plug into it, what would happen? Nothing?
I know I've read about people plugging into an outlet at someone's house and frying their electrics due to running 240 Volts to their 120 appliances. Would that just be a result of the outlet being wired incorrectly, and have nothing to do with the wirer copying a welder outlet?
Am I laboring under a misapprehension here? I know that I lost one leg of my 50 amp service and then had some appliances, lights, and outlets not work.
โJul-29-2019 02:30 PM
โJul-29-2019 02:09 PM
Alan_Hepburn wrote:An RV 30 amp plug will not fit into a 3 terminal 240 volt welding or older style dryer or stove outlet. The 30 amp RV plug has two blades and a pin, while the 240 volt outlet has three blade sockets. That third blade socket is narrower than the ground pin on the RV plug. To make the RV plug fit into that 240 volt 3 blade outlet you either need to modify the pin on the RV plug or use a hammer to force it in.fj12ryder wrote:
But I do wonder about people that say they have plugged into a welder outlet and damaged their RV. Or is that just a case of the outlet wired incorrectly for the welder?
Those people are usually dealing with a 30A RV - some older 240V 3 terminal outlets are close enough to an RV 30A outlet that some people will force their plug into the outlet, with the expected results.
โJul-29-2019 01:54 PM
SoundGuy wrote:fj12ryder wrote:
So if I'm reading this right, if I plugged my RV into the dryer outlet, if it fit of course, no harm would come to my RV because they're both 240 volts? Correct?
Your RV is wired for 120 vac main service, NOT 240 vac. What do you think will happen if you plug your 120 vac trailer into 240 vac source power? :E
โJul-29-2019 01:50 PM
fj12ryder wrote:
But I do wonder about people that say they have plugged into a welder outlet and damaged their RV. Or is that just a case of the outlet wired incorrectly for the welder?
โJul-29-2019 12:50 PM
drsteve wrote:Okay, I admit I'm slightly wrong.fj12ryder wrote:SoundGuy wrote:Yes, I know. I was trying to make a point about DSteiner51 stating:fj12ryder wrote:
So if I'm reading this right, if I plugged my RV into the dryer outlet, if it fit of course, no harm would come to my RV because they're both 240 volts? Correct?
Your RV is wired for 120 vac main service, NOT 240 vac. What do you think will happen if you plug your 120 vac trailer into 240 vac source power? :E
"If in fact my house is 240 volts and my dryer, range, and well pump, then my 5th wheel is also 240 volts. When I use a volt meter and jump between my two hot bars in my RV it reads 240 volts. Horrors!"
DSteiner51 is correct. It will work just fine, because they are identical in every way. Your RV uses the two 120V legs separately, to supply 120V to the various systems of the RV. Your stove, dryer, or whatever, uses the two 120V legs together to get 240V.
Next time you're on a 50 amp RV site, get your voltmeter out and check. Hot to neutral, 120V. The other hot to neutral, 120V. Hot to hot, 240V. Just like the stove outlet at home.
โJul-29-2019 12:44 PM