Forum Discussion

Allenjv's avatar
Allenjv
Explorer
May 19, 2024

A fried converter, has anyone had this covered by insurance?

I plugged my motorhome into a bad power source. It fried the converter, relay and various electronics in the motorhome.
Has anyone that has done this, got there insurance to cover all or some of the repair?
State Farm full coverage policy refuses,
do pay anything:

Reason:::
"The electrical and/or electronic breakdown is excluded under the policy language in 9837B pg 32, exc 13

Policy Language: ANY PART OR EQUIPMENT OF A COVERED VEHICLE IF THAT PART OR EQUIPMENT:
a. FAILS OR IS DEFECTIVE; OR
b. IS DAMAGED AS A DIRECT RESULT OF:
(1) WEAR AND TEAR;
(2) FREEZING; OR
(3) MECHANICAL, ELECTRICAL, OR ELECTRONIC BREAKDOWN OR MALFUNCTION
OF THAT PART OR EQUIPMENT."

  • What does your auto policy say? Read the policy to find the coverage and then read the exclusions. That's your contract and your insurer isn't going to pay for anything outside of what's covered by the contract.

  • You might get something from the insurer of the faulty source (i.e. the rv park that provided the faulty source).

  • The other side of the coin is, he did not provide us with anything regarding how he knows the electrical source was faulty. That “proofs” could lay the blame on “the electrical source”, while lack of such proof leads to no one to blame. The way I read it, number (b)3 is pretty clear - that coverage is excluded. I’d also note, he never said he was at a campground, he may be his own “faulty source”. Wouldn’t be the first time a do-it-yourselfer wired an RV plug wrong.

    • valhalla360's avatar
      valhalla360
      Navigator

      This is likely the first issue to overcome. You have to prove an outside force caused the damage. Speculation that there was some sort of power spike with no evidence and they can say it was faulty equipment in the trailer (as opposed to...a huge crash of lightening and immediately, everything blew out.

  • ya extended mechanical insurance is a pain to get anything done.  I didn't use mine at all and got 60% of the cost back as the repairs I had to make were less than the deductable if I did the work myself.  the only times I have gotten electric stuff fixed was under the original manufactures warenty for an auto changover switch.  

     

    I agree with way2roll, if you know it was a faulty power asource that should be under the liability of the park owner to cover, but it is also your responcibility to know that stuff like this could happen and have a surge protector that shows if the power source is good or not, they are cheep insurance.  

  • I am not sure I agree with their assessment in that there wasn't a breakdown or malfunction of your electrical system, it was a result of plugging into a faulty electrical system. Not the first time insurance an insurance company balked at a claim. That said, it really depends on where you plugged into. Seems to me, if the electrical source you plugged into was faulty, it would be the responsibility of the owner of that electrical system. Was this at a campground? 

     

    • Allenjv's avatar
      Allenjv
      Explorer

      No it was at my shop.  I mis wired a welder plug for the rv.  My 50amp plus is 220, and I thought the 3 prong was too, just with a lighter breaker..  WRONG!

      but making a driving mistake vs a plug-in mistake..  but they just don't see it my way.  I think I will cancel State Farm and seek a different company.

      • way2roll's avatar
        way2roll
        Navigator II

        I am not sure what you mean by "making a driving mistake vs a plug-in mistake". 

        But if you wired a plug incorrectly and then plugged your RV in to it, then I would say that's your fault and not surprising they won't pay the claim. Lots of questions on here about wiring home pedestals and the general consensus is to get an electrician who not only is licensed but familiar with the difference between a welder outlet and one for an RV. As you learned the hard way, there is a difference. 

        A 50 AMP RV outlet requires 4 wires - 2 hots, a ground - and a 4th wire that is a neutral to split the 240V into 120V. Your RV appliances actually run on 120V.  A welder outlet has 3 wires - 2 hots and a ground. So with no neutral to split, you get all 240V. 

        50-amp RV shore power should REALLY be called a 100-amp service since it does supply 50 + 50 amps, which equals up to 100 amps of current draw but at 120 volts.

         

About Technical Issues

Having RV issues? Connect with others who have been in your shoes.24,188 PostsLatest Activity: Jan 19, 2025