โFeb-14-2017 08:00 AM
โFeb-21-2017 06:18 PM
โFeb-21-2017 05:07 PM
โFeb-21-2017 02:51 PM
SoundGuy wrote:DutchmenSport wrote:
In your case, the most that will happen is, your wires will begin to warm up. If they do, you're drawing too much. Simple answer? Get a heaver extension cord.
Worst case: You pop the breaker in your house! Solution? Turn something off, you've exceeded 20 amps.
Not true. The worst that can happen is you could eventually fry the A/C compressor from excessive voltage drop that is so quick it can't be detected with a DVM. A typical 13,500 BTU A/C has an average LRA (Locked Rotor Amp) rating of ~ 60 amps ... do that often enough over a long length of small gauge cable and a warm cable will be the least of your problems. ๐
โFeb-14-2017 07:26 PM
โFeb-14-2017 04:29 PM
DutchmenSport wrote:
In your case, the most that will happen is, your wires will begin to warm up. If they do, you're drawing too much. Simple answer? Get a heaver extension cord.
Worst case: You pop the breaker in your house! Solution? Turn something off, you've exceeded 20 amps.
โFeb-14-2017 04:15 PM
โFeb-14-2017 01:35 PM
โFeb-14-2017 01:01 PM
theoldwizard1 wrote:Yes and 122 would even be better.time2roll wrote:
Verify running voltage is 108+ inside the RV and check for excessive heat at the connections.
Otherwise you are good to go.
I would be happier if it was >110V.
โFeb-14-2017 12:58 PM
DrewE wrote:turbojimmy wrote:Chris Bryant wrote:
Voltage is all that matters- I run air conditioners off a 100 foot #12 cable all the time- voltage maintains above 115 volts.
Me too - plugged into a 20A outlet. No issues.
I always check for heat at the ends of the cord but haven't had any issues. I'd like to think if there were enough heat the breaker would trip.
Heat at the connectors wouldn't necessarily cause the circuit breaker to trip because the circuit breaker is responding to current only. Hot connectors are usually the result of a poor connection somewhere--either between the pins/blades and their receiving contacts, or between the wire and the connector. A poor connection has higher resistance, which means both an observable voltage drop and some power being dissipated at the connection (as heat).
The circuit breaker is sized so as to prevent the wire itself from heating too much due to its inherent resistance. It should keep your 12 gauge extension cord from overheating dangerously (assuming it's not confined in a small area, such as by being coiled, so that the heat can't escape readily, and is undamaged, and isn't running through a campfire...).
If a circuit breaker somehow responded to heat far removed from the breaker, it would make tools like soldering irons a complete impossibility.
โFeb-14-2017 12:57 PM
mustanglover32 wrote:Check the running voltage is 108+ in the RV and check for excessive heat at the connections.
So, from what I'm gathering, it shouldn't be an issue for the outlet, but I need to get a 10 gauge extension cord.
By that logic, is my 30 to 15 amp dogbone being overloaded also?
โFeb-14-2017 12:53 PM
turbojimmy wrote:Chris Bryant wrote:
Voltage is all that matters- I run air conditioners off a 100 foot #12 cable all the time- voltage maintains above 115 volts.
Me too - plugged into a 20A outlet. No issues.
I always check for heat at the ends of the cord but haven't had any issues. I'd like to think if there were enough heat the breaker would trip.
โFeb-14-2017 12:49 PM
By that logic, is my 30 to 15 amp dogbone being overloaded also?Maybe. We don't know what's inside it and can't judge if it gets hot or not.
โFeb-14-2017 12:45 PM
mustanglover32 wrote:
Second Question: Should voltage drop be a concern, since there is approximately 40-50 feet of cable (travel trailer wiring + extension cord) between the outlet and the AC.
time2roll wrote:
Verify running voltage is 108+ inside the RV and check for excessive heat at the connections.
Otherwise you are good to go.
โFeb-14-2017 12:04 PM