โOct-13-2018 06:28 AM
โOct-13-2018 02:33 PM
Brettmm92 wrote:What else are you trying to use at the same time? Microwave? Coffee maker? Is the water heater on electric? Something is overloading that circuit. If you need to use the electric heater, other electricity hogs need to be off.
2oldman, I'm all ears. Let me make sure your not going over my head. I'm assuming the deal is, is that the flow of electricity is coming out of the outlet and has volts and amps. I'm thinking the volts stay at 120 and then whatever you plug in has a certain wattage to it that directly affects the amps needed to reach that wattage? Like a car driving down the road at a constant 120 but sometimes there's hills up or down that change the amount you need to press the pedal(amps) to stay at 120?
And to elaborate, I wasn't flipping the camper switch, it was flipping the switch to the house that I'm connected to with an adapter. I'm able to use most things, even air conditioner without a problem but the heater was just too much. But I did buy one that was supposed to really put out some heat. I've read that there are some radiant heaters that advertise themselves as low wattage but I see mixed reviews and always assume there are some fake reviews
โOct-13-2018 02:31 PM
Brettmm92 wrote:An undersized extension cord, poor quality adapter or a weak breaker at the house could be your problem. Is the tripping breaker a 15A or 20A?
**snip** And to elaborate, I wasn't flipping the camper switch, it was flipping the switch to the house that I'm connected to with an adapter. I'm able to use most things, even air conditioner without a problem but the heater was just too much. **snip**
โOct-13-2018 02:09 PM
Brettmm92 wrote:
But I did buy one that was supposed to really put out some heat.
โOct-13-2018 12:43 PM
Brettmm92 wrote:That's a pretty close analogy.
I'm thinking the volts stay at 120 and then whatever you plug in has a certain wattage to it that directly affects the amps needed to reach that wattage? Like a car driving down the road at a constant 120 but sometimes there's hills up or down that change the amount you need to press the pedal(amps) to stay at 120?
โOct-13-2018 11:37 AM
โOct-13-2018 09:53 AM
donn0128 wrote:
Heater is a heater is a heater. All electric heaters are limited to 1500Watts. That keeps them undrr the 20A most household breakers will be. What else are you attempting to use in the same circuit? Realisticslly an electric heater must be on a circuit that nothing else is on it. Also plan on replqcing the breaker. Once they start tripping it will only get weaker.
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