Forum Discussion
- joebedfordNomad IIMy generator trips the ground-fault breaker at the stick house so I always unplug from the house before exercising or if I need to run air conditioning.
- Chum_leeExplorer
maillemaker wrote:
And it all depends on your RV. If you've got an older one like me, you can't be on shore power and generator at the same time. The entire RV feeds through one line. If you unplug it from the socket for the generator to plug it into shore power, then you can't be on generator power. Likewise if you unplug it from shore power to plug it back into the generator socket, you can't be on shore power.
So it's real easy with a old RV. If you aren't plugged into the generator output socket, the genset power is going nowhere - it's just running doing nothing.
Yes. This is true on older systems. The power pigtail must be plugged into one or the other (generator outlet or shore power plug) to get 120 volts unless you have a appliances which power up independently from a 120 volt inverter wired into the 12 volt house or chassis system.
Chum lee - maillemakerExplorerAnd it all depends on your RV. If you've got an older one like me, you can't be on shore power and generator at the same time. The entire RV feeds through one line. If you unplug it from the socket for the generator to plug it into shore power, then you can't be on generator power. Likewise if you unplug it from shore power to plug it back into the generator socket, you can't be on shore power.
So it's real easy with a old RV. If you aren't plugged into the generator output socket, the genset power is going nowhere - it's just runnning doing nothing. - MrWizardModeratorYes... Takes two minutes, and unplug shower power
This forum has posts from people who did not do this and damaged the generator or some appliances or both, along with replacing the transfer switch - Kayteg1Explorer II
pianotuna wrote:
Why risk a several thousand dollar generator by trusting a 25 dollar transfer switch? Unplug before you start the generator.
Now you are making danger up.
Even if TS fails and freeze, it will simply stay on shore power.
Nothing will damage generator. - pianotunaNomad IIIWhy risk a several thousand dollar generator by trusting a 25 dollar transfer switch? Unplug before you start the generator.
- Kayteg1Explorer II
Janss wrote:
So I ask you, Kayteg1....If I understand your post correctly, you are indicating that it doesn't matter if one is plugged into shore power when running the generator. Are you saying that the automatic switch will switch over to generator power when shore power is already plugged in?
That is how priority are set in the system.
Generator is always the first choice. When no power from generator, shore power is 2nd choice.
When no power from both above it switches to batteries.
Than if you have 3-way fridge with Auto button it is going to be
1. 120V
2. propane
3. 12V
All done automatically unless you override it. - 2oldmanExplorer II
Janss wrote:
There's one sure way to know. If the generator bogs down when you run the air that will tell you.
..it doesn't matter if one is plugged into shore power when running the generator. Are you saying that the automatic switch will switch over to generator power when shore power is already plugged in? - KD4UPLExplorerMy auto transfer switch will switch to the gen when it is started even if plugged into shore power. I assumed they all did that but maybe not.
OP, depends on how your switch is set up. If shore is priority you need to unplug to load the gen. If gen is priority then no need. If you're not trying to load then gen then it doesn't matter but I don't know why you'd run it with no load.
Unplugging is always fine, just an extra step sometimes. - gboppExplorerI have an automatic transfer switch and I always unplug from shore power when I start the generator. Just in case.
About Technical Issues
Having RV issues? Connect with others who have been in your shoes.24,209 PostsLatest Activity: Feb 27, 2025