โJun-19-2016 08:17 PM
โJun-23-2016 08:09 PM
โJun-23-2016 07:27 PM
โJun-23-2016 06:51 PM
โJun-23-2016 06:44 PM
โJun-23-2016 06:17 PM
โJun-23-2016 05:51 PM
โJun-22-2016 04:35 PM
โJun-22-2016 04:08 PM
valhalla360 wrote:
Not sure on this but at very low voltage, I suspect the wattage required will increase as the motors turn less efficiently.
So an 1800watt motor may be pulling 1900watts due to low voltage. By giving it full voltage, it needs less watts.
Can any one confirm this?
โJun-22-2016 03:09 PM
โJun-22-2016 02:24 PM
GordonThree wrote:2oldman wrote:GordonThree wrote:Not sure I understand your question. The purpose of an AF is to boost sagging voltage, which by definition decreases amps.
If the wiring at the CG is so bad that voltage is severely sagging, how is an autotransformer going to help? As a step-up transformer, it will be trading amps for volts,...
Increased voltage reduces amps only on the output side, the transformer's secondary ... but there is no free lunch, that boost in voltage comes from increased current draw on the input side, the primary.
Say an AC needs 1800 watts to operate. At 125 volts that is 14.4 amps. To deliver 1800 watts, the primary winding, operating at 100 volts, needs to draw 18 amps, plus whatever losses there are in the transformer itself.
โJun-21-2016 11:05 AM
smkettner wrote:GordonThree wrote:
Why would the electrical inspectors have passed such a poorly designed system? 120 down to 102 volts is a huge drop, there must be under-sized conductors in the branch or feeder circuits?
The more connections the more code allows the total to be derated.
The code is just not designed to meet the demands of modern RVs that pull 80+pct of the available power near continuous.
36+ sites on one loop allows for just 41pct of total.
Say 40 sites at 30 amp is 1200 amps. NEC say loop can be 492 amp total. Get a bunch like pianotuna and the voltage just sags away.
NEC 551.73
There are certainly other details and I am not an electrician but I think you get the point. What worked 30+ years ago is not adequate today.
โJun-21-2016 09:28 AM
โJun-20-2016 09:02 PM
GordonThree wrote:
Why would the electrical inspectors have passed such a poorly designed system? 120 down to 102 volts is a huge drop, there must be under-sized conductors in the branch or feeder circuits?
โJun-20-2016 08:50 PM
Snowman9000 wrote:
How often do you need hot water? Considering the ambient temperature, I would think 10 minutes of propane burn prior to taking a shower would be plenty good for the day. That's how we do it, anyway. Does not use much propane.