โJul-31-2016 01:52 PM
โAug-01-2016 03:41 AM
โJul-31-2016 06:46 PM
โJul-31-2016 03:39 PM
โJul-31-2016 03:37 PM
MrWizard wrote:"DRY CAMPING" running off battery.
DC power from batteries and/or converter
IF on shore power, you should still have power even if you pulled the batteries
( i dont advise doing this, just a comment about power path )
circuit breakers have nothing to with DC, except for the power from the converter goes off if you turn off the breaker while on shore power, battery will stay on
start at the battery cables
โJul-31-2016 03:36 PM
MrWizard wrote:I jiggled, but all tight and clean. I'm anal with maintenance. The old girl is ....old.
DC power from batteries and/or converter
IF on shore power, you should still have power even if you pulled the batteries
( i dont advise doing this, just a comment about power path )
circuit breakers have nothing to with DC, except for the power from the converter goes off if you turn off the breaker while on shore power, battery will stay on
start at the battery cables
โJul-31-2016 03:05 PM
MrWizard wrote:
DC power from batteries and/or converter
IF on shore power, you should still have power even if you pulled the batteries
( i dont advise doing this, just a comment about power path )
โJul-31-2016 02:32 PM
โJul-31-2016 02:26 PM
pbitschura wrote:
Hi all. We dry camped this weekend. We experienced intermittent and occasional heavy rain. Ceiling vent in bathroom was open and some rain landed in the shower pan. Twice, we experienced compplete loss of dc. power. Did the checklist, gfi, checked fuses, checked battery contacts. First event, power resumed after jiggling 15 amp bathroom fuse. Second event, power resumed after jiggling battery terminals. I don't know if events were coincidental, or what. Could rain have entered the push button switch in the shower or the exposed twist connectors in the shower fan without tripping a breaker? What else may have caused this problem? The rest of the weekend was dry and all systems were go.