Some typical and modest estimates of 120 Volt AC Amp loadsโฆ 30 Amps doesnโt go very far in a modern RVโฆ
Allowing for motor start Amps the AC and the converter alone can at times be a lot of loadโฆ
I think when someone says they run multiple appliances all the time, while turned on wouldnโt mean they are all running together all the timeโฆ in other words they have gotten away with it so farโฆ obviously when you draw more than 30 Amp even for a short time the breaker will trip, or the breaker is faultyโฆ
Power management is almost always necessary with a 30 Amp RV, because there are too many things we canโt controlโฆ for example we control the AC on switch but not when the compressor starts and stops, or when the water heater kicks on, or when the battery charger decides the battery needs a boostโฆ the water heater and fridge and other DC circuits still draw power while connected to shore powerโฆ RV conveniences have passed the 30 Amp threshold a long time agoโฆ
My AC normally draws more than 10a, and the converter alone can draw from 1 -8 amps you need to allow about 8 amps for start-up drawsโฆ you are basically at your limit with only the AC turned on with the risk of tripping the breaker most of the timeโฆ
Allowances I useโฆ
Allowance for startup Amp draw โ 8 Amps
Air Conditioner (X number of A/C) - 12-16 Amps
Computer (Laptop) - 2-3 Amps
Converter - 1-8 Amps
Electric Water Heater - 9-13 Amps
Light (60 watt % 120V) - <1 Amp
Microwave - 8-13 Amps
Microwave (Convection Oven) - 13 Amps
Refrigerator in AC mode - 5-8 Amps
Space Heater - 8-13 Amps
Television - 1.5-4 Amps
Washer/Dryer - 14-16Amps
I think the bigger concern I have is from those that claim they can run to many things at one time and have never tripped a breakerโฆ sounds to me that they should have their breakers testedโฆ
There have been millions of counterfeit electrical breakers that have entered the country from China and no one knows how many may be out thereโฆ
The RV industries buying policies sure makes them ripe for buying some of themโฆ
Love my mass produced, entry level, built by Lazy American Workers, Hornet