โJun-23-2015 09:31 AM
โJun-24-2015 01:08 PM
joebedford wrote:
Just curious - what do you mean by a "normal" 20A house circuit? Maybe that's what you have, but where I live, a "normal" house circuit is 15A.
I have two 30A RV receptacles for when friends come to visit. Mine stays plugged into a 15A circuit.
โJun-24-2015 01:06 PM
SkiSmuggs wrote:
After reading this thread, I think the OP should have run a 50 amp extention cord to the 20a house circuit, then used the dogbone adapter for the final connection. Using a 15a extention cord over that distance is asking for problems.
And if the OP reads this, I am curious as to the resolution of the problem.
โJun-24-2015 12:49 PM
โJun-24-2015 10:55 AM
โJun-24-2015 10:21 AM
โJun-24-2015 07:58 AM
rob_engineer wrote:Sorry to hear your a/c may have bit the bullet ๐
. . . I'm coming to the conclusion that my old unit is toast.
โJun-23-2015 06:48 PM
greenrvgreen wrote:
I'd start by replacing the breaker. It's cheaper and (IMO) more likely to be the problem.
If the AC won't run properly on a fresh breaker then it never did, not even for the PO. But before I bought a new AC I'd take a hard look at the wiring.
There are four bolts that hold a roof AC to the vent orifice. If you remover those you can press the AC up and on to the roof. Somewhere at the side of the vent orifice you'll find the AC hardwired in with thumbscrews. Before I went out and bought a new AC I'd try powering it directly via the hardwire connection, just to see.
Also, have a look around. Is the water heater on electric? The battery charger running? These things are FAR more likely to be the problem. Maybe your batts are dead and the converter can't stop trying to charge them.
โJun-23-2015 05:55 PM
โJun-23-2015 04:14 PM
โJun-23-2015 03:38 PM
โJun-23-2015 03:04 PM
โJun-23-2015 02:54 PM
โJun-23-2015 02:38 PM
โJun-23-2015 02:01 PM
greenrvgreen wrote:That seems dangerously low.
I've run a 13.5k AC for hours and hours on 100v or slightly less.