โSep-26-2018 09:18 AM
โOct-14-2018 07:56 PM
Lynnmor wrote:
Perhaps you could fill up the RV with the parks lawnmower fuel? ๐
โOct-13-2018 10:08 PM
deltabravo wrote:They can now advertise 50A service at virtually no cost.TDIStan wrote:
How common are parks with "cheater" 50amp service? By "cheater" 50amp service I mean a standard NMEA 14-50R outlet that has been wired with BOTH hot terminals on the same 120v leg. "Cheater" 50amp service does not provide 240v - only two 120v circuits.
Sounds like that kind of wiring isn't going to pass code / electrical inspection, so I can't imagine why an outlet would be wired like that.
โOct-13-2018 09:33 PM
TDIStan wrote:
How common are parks with "cheater" 50amp service? By "cheater" 50amp service I mean a standard NMEA 14-50R outlet that has been wired with BOTH hot terminals on the same 120v leg. "Cheater" 50amp service does not provide 240v - only two 120v circuits.
โOct-12-2018 10:03 PM
โOct-12-2018 07:03 PM
MrWizard wrote:No, a "cheater" 50 amp service would be where one leg of the service wiring (generally 200 or more amp service) is split at the pedestal and used to supply both sides of a 50 amp double pole breaker. This would allow a total supply of 100 amps, but since it is only one leg of service the neutral will carry the sum of the total amperage draw, rather than the difference which is what happens when a double pole breaker is properly wired. As others have pointed out this can lead to the neutral carrying 100 amps. And if this setup is repeated up and down a row of RVs the neutral could end up carrying multiple times that, leading eventually to a fire hazard or worse.
both of you guys are overlooking the whole topic
"50amp cheater"
only 50amps available at the plug, not 100amps
because only ONE 50amp 'service leg' was used to power both legs of the 50amp receptacle
meaning only 50amps at 120v is available ,,, shared to both legs of the outlet
NOT possible to use more, the 50amp breaker will trip
โOct-12-2018 06:18 PM
โOct-12-2018 05:56 PM
MrWizard wrote:
both of you guys are overlooking the whole topic
"50amp cheater"
only 50amps available at the plug, not 100amps
because only ONE 50amp 'service leg' was used to power both legs of the 50amp receptacle
meaning only 50amps at 120v is available ,,, shared to both legs of the outlet
NOT possible to use more, the 50amp breaker will trip
โOct-12-2018 05:32 PM
โOct-12-2018 04:18 PM
vermilye wrote:X2 While a total draw of 100A is unlikely, it is also common for 50A rigs to draw more that 50A especially during the summer.MrWizard wrote:
it's totally safe
It's exactly what happens when you use 30 male to 50 female to run the 50 amp RV on a 30 amp service
Only the so called cheater pedestal, would be one 50 amp leg, ( instead of only 30 amps ) powering the 50 amp outlet, giving 25 amps on each leg
Or 50 on one leg or whatever each leg of the RV pulled up to the total of 50 amps of 120v available
How safe it would be depends on how the electrician wired it. If both legs of the 50 amp breaker are connected to the input wiring, it is possible to draw 50 amps on EACH leg in the RV. Instead of the neutral carrying the difference between the two hots, it would carry the sum. 50 + 50 is 100 amps on the unfused neutral. Unless it is oversized, that could be a problem. While it is not likely an RV would draw a full 50 amps on each leg, it is technically possible.
โOct-12-2018 01:14 PM
MrWizard wrote:
it's totally safe
It's exactly what happens when you use 30 male to 50 female to run the 50 amp RV on a 30 amp service
Only the so called cheater pedestal, would be one 50 amp leg, ( instead of only 30 amps ) powering the 50 amp outlet, giving 25 amps on each leg
Or 50 on one leg or whatever each leg of the RV pulled up to the total of 50 amps of 120v available
โOct-12-2018 10:38 AM
โOct-12-2018 10:19 AM
โOct-12-2018 09:11 AM
allen8106 wrote:TDIStan wrote:
I mean a standard NMEA 14-50R outlet that has been wired with BOTH hot terminals on the same 120v leg.
This is standard for RV's and RV service. This gives you two 120 volt legs in your RV. One usually runs the AC or multiple AC's, the other usually runs all other 120 circuits.
โOct-12-2018 08:56 AM
TDIStan wrote:
I mean a standard NMEA 14-50R outlet that has been wired with BOTH hot terminals on the same 120v leg.