Forum Discussion
- Geo_BoyExplorer II
thomasmnile wrote:
The Amish Craftsmanship you don't see until you remove the "lipstick" offn the "pig".
How did the Amish get involved? - thomasmnileExplorerThe Amish Craftsmanship you don't see until you remove the "lipstick" offn the "pig".
- larry_cadExplorer IIWater and electricity isn't the problem. It's water and the corrosion that it makes. Actually electricity and corrosion isn't a super bad problem. Now, talk about electricity and high resistance and you have a problem. High resistance 12v connections caused by corrosion, with lots of amps available can create heat. Heat can cause fires. If that all happens, they you have a real problem.
Oh, and that does happen. Not often certainly. But then, how many times do you really want it to happen? - mkirschNomad IIPeople have this idea that the presence of electricity near water equals electrocution, period. The whole thing of pouring water on something electrical and everyone in the vicinity being fried like chicken only happens in cartoons and low budget action movies.
The conditions where it's dangerous are pretty specific. As with anything electrical you need a circuit, in the case of AC, a path to ground. For example, standing in a puddle of water and touching an improperly wired fixture. With 12V DC you won't even feel it. - moonlitsoulsExplorerThanks for the replies. I agree it is very messy and that definitely bothers my OCD. I’ll clean it up eventually. But for now I got bigger fish to fry, like where I’m going to mount my inverter and my lithium battery bank. Will make a new thread with photos and try to get some more eyes on this.
- Grit_dogNavigatorIt's normal.
- jimh406Explorer IIIJust to clarify, water pumps typically run on 12V-DC in an RV not AC. Low voltage DC is not anywhere near as dangerous as AC with respect to a human. That block sure looks like it could be AC with copper and white cable. That being said, I’ve never seen someone use an uncovered AC block, so it could be DC. RVs I’ve seen usually use red/black for 12V. It might be worth calling/emailing Eagle Cap to see what that block is.
You are always going to at least have the DC connectors to the water pump because that’s how it’s powered. Not that I’ve seen every water pump install in every RV, but I’ve never seen one in a compartment with many other connections either AC or DC. That will be a pain to replace in the future if needed.
Not that my Host didn’t use the minimum length of cable which annoys me, but it’s much cleaner than that. They obviously didn’t expect anyone to ever work/add to the wiring or tap into the subpanel. I guess that’s ok considering none of the factory plugs/lights have failed in the 15 years I’ve had it. - NRALIFRExplorerShow me an RV that doesn’t look like that in its “unseen” cubbyholes.
The only reason mine looks somewhat orderly in those areas is because I cleaned them up.
Under my galley sink is a combination of water lines, drain plumbing, water heater, water pump, jack controller, DC-DC charger, propane line, high and low voltage wiring, CB’s, fuses and switches all in close proximity. I keep a close eye on that area for leaks, and in the almost 20 years that I’ve owned this camper there have been a few.
Just part of the package.
:):) - Geo_BoyExplorer II
Geewizard wrote:
What brand of camper? What year of camper?
It’s an Eagle Cap. Scary. - GeewizardExplorerWhat brand of camper? What year of camper?
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