โAug-05-2018 01:45 PM
โAug-06-2018 06:01 PM
CA Traveler wrote:The evaporator and condenser fans are run by the same motor, and the some of the condenser airflow is routed over the compressor. Maybe they're not all the same, but that's how mine works.
How does running the inside air circulation fan cool the outside compressor?
โAug-06-2018 12:05 PM
โAug-06-2018 10:32 AM
MrWizard wrote:
PT
Yes, running on fan removes heat from the compressor
So when done using the MW, just switch back to cool
No need to do the fan first restart delay
Standard practice for me when using a portable generator
โAug-06-2018 08:51 AM
โAug-06-2018 07:43 AM
โAug-05-2018 07:16 PM
SoundGuy wrote:coffebreak wrote:
Temps here in Az are about 115 daily and the A/C in the TT of course runs constantly. ....Now my question is that when we use the microwave now it runs for a few minutes and than the main breaker trips which it never did in the cooler weather... could this be happening because the temps are so hot now and the A/C is working constantly ...
Absolutely. As exterior ambient temps rise so too does compressor head pressure, which in turn means it's drawing more current than it would at lower temperatures.
โAug-05-2018 07:14 PM
dougrainer wrote:pianotuna wrote:
At those temperatures my Dometic 13500 draws 1900 watts. Add the fridge (325 watts) and the microwave (1570 watts in my case) and the total is far more than 3600 watts
The OP's problem has to do with 115 temps. That means his roof AC is drawing 2 amps MORE than spec. Odds are his roof AC HI COOL is about 14 amps add 2 to 16 amps and other small amp draws(refer 3 amps) and then his M/W kicks in at average 10 to 11 amps and he goes over the 30 amp main breaker threshold. So, he needs to run the AC on Hi Fan only when operating the M/W. Then go back to Hi Cool after cooking. Doug
โAug-05-2018 06:39 PM
โAug-05-2018 04:48 PM
pianotuna wrote:
At those temperatures my Dometic 13500 draws 1900 watts. Add the fridge (325 watts) and the microwave (1570 watts in my case) and the total is far more than 3600 watts.
A 30 amp service is intended to provide only 24 amps continuous. To translate that to watts multiply by 107 = 2568 watts. (the minimum safe voltage).
โAug-05-2018 03:17 PM
eHoefler wrote:
What kind of outlet are you plugged into, regular 30 amp, or 15 amp house hold outlet?? Any extension cords?? If you are plugged into a 15 amp outlet, and/or using extension cords, there is your problem.
โAug-05-2018 03:11 PM
โAug-05-2018 02:50 PM
coffebreak wrote:
Temps here in Az are about 115 daily and the A/C in the TT of course runs constantly. ....Now my question is that when we use the microwave now it runs for a few minutes and than the main breaker trips which it never did in the cooler weather... could this be happening because the temps are so hot now and the A/C is working constantly ...
โAug-05-2018 02:29 PM
โAug-05-2018 02:25 PM