โAug-25-2020 06:02 PM
โAug-27-2020 12:36 PM
dougrainer wrote:
If Jayco prepped, you will see a 4 by 4 metal electrical box in that Gen compartment that houses the 120 wires going to the Transfer box IF there is a Transfer box. If no electrical box, it is not prepped. What Year/Model are do you have? Doug
โAug-27-2020 06:08 AM
โAug-26-2020 07:47 PM
dougrainer wrote:
Jayco just installs an INVERTER ONLY for the Residential refer installs. That Inverter has PASS THRU power. That means when you are connected to Shore or gen Power, the 120 volts goes thru the Inverter and the Inverter if ON, goes to stand by. When the 120 input is disconnected the Inverter then starts Inverting 120 power to the refer. There is nothing you have to do other than install the Genset and connect the wiring to the Genset. IF the Jayco is prewired for a Genset, the 120 wiring and the Transfer box should already be installed. I have NEVER seen the Leveling system control box on a Jayco installed in the Genset compartment. This must be something new Jayco is doing. They usually install the Control module in the first Storage compartment ceiling in the middle between the sides of the RV. I know people complained of that because when they needed to access the fuses and such, they had to remove all their storage items they stored in that large compartment. Doug
โAug-26-2020 06:45 AM
โAug-26-2020 04:44 AM
Heavy Metal Doctor wrote:
I have a new Jayco 5th wheel unit with a residential fridge which runs off of an inverter. As I understand it, it is essentially one 110V circuit which is wired separately from the rest of the unit and powered by the inverter so that the fridge stays powered off of the batteries at all times, regardless of outside power.
Heavy Metal Doctor wrote:
The RV power panel keep the batteries topped off as long as there is shore power.
Heavy Metal Doctor wrote:
I am about to install a Cummins / Onan QG 5500 LP generator. I'm wondering if there are any changes for the inverter that should be considered (or just a good idea / improvement) while messing around with all the wiring. Or, simply "tee" in the generator between the shore power and the existing RV power panel and let the rest stay as it is?
Heavy Metal Doctor wrote:
I have seen Progressive Dynamics mentioned often as good power products for RV's (tell me if that's true or false), so I have found one of their transfer switches with built in surge protector I'm thinking of ordering for this setup.
โAug-26-2020 04:27 AM
โAug-26-2020 04:20 AM
โAug-25-2020 09:06 PM
โAug-25-2020 07:59 PM