All ActivityMost RecentMost LikesSolutionsSolar install charge questionAdding the solar panels and charge controller this week. I have read that the converter IQ charger and the Solar Charge controller can confuse each other so wonder if I should use a marine battery switch to be able to select charge source to the batteries so they don't conflict. Or am I overthinking this.Re: 12V wiring Aluminum Cargo Trailer conversion DrewE wrote: SlideInDad wrote: If the IOTA45 converter is simply properly bonded to my house 120V what purpose would the chassis ground serve? The converter chassis needs to be bonded to the RV chassis (as is detailed in its installation manual), and the 120V ground needs to be bonded to the RV chassis. The 120V ground to chassis connection is for safety in case there should be an electrical fault in the 120V wiring, causing the hot to short to the chassis. If the chassis were not grounded, it would be hot and pose a shock hazard to anyone entering or exiting the RV (a hot skin). Having it bonded to ground prevents that, and assuming the short is low enough impedance causes the breaker to trip due to overcurrent. The 12V bond is a bit more subtle. As I understand it, it is practically speaking impossible to totally isolate the chassis from 12V negative ground with typical appliances and lights, and so it's likely that the chassis will be connected to the 12V negative side somehow or another. If there's not a good bond between the battery and the chassis, and the converter output and the chassis, then there's the opportunity for all of the converter current to find its way through e.g. the 120V ground wire or the ground wires for various 12V appliances back to the battery in the case where the main wire from the converter's negative output to the battery is broken or disconnected. This amount of current can easily be a dangerous overload for those wires; hence, as a safety precaution, they must be tied to the chassis with a low impedance wire that will carry the fault current safely. Assuming you have electric trailer breaks with a breakaway switch, the trailer chassis will have to be grounded for that system to work properly. (I guess that's also assuming you're using the house battery for the emergency braking power, which is standard practice. Having to maintain two separate batteries when one will do just fine on its own seems...well, silly.) I do have a breakaway system with an old dead battery, was figuring on wiring it to the new 12V house battery system. I haven't looked yet but assumed it was grounded back to the Tow Vehicle?Re: 12V wiring Aluminum Cargo Trailer conversionSo I found this article which is quite descriptive of chassis grounding. RV electricity part 1 and Part 2 It would seem that the ground-plane used for most RVs DC system is for the purpose of serving as a negative return for DC appliances. The true focus of the ground discussed in these articles is: "properly “grounded” your RV chassis must have its EGC wire properly “bonded” (connected) to the power company’s service panel “ground/neutral/earth” bonding point. And that bonding must provide an under-1-ohm connection for the neutral of the transformer on the power pole to return any fault currents back to whence they started (in the transformer)" Since it's become very clear in all my research to date that I should not return any negative DC current via the 100% aluminum chassis of my trailer (will run negative wires from every appliance back to the fuse panel instead) it's starting to sound like the real concern I should have is simply my shore power connection as I will be running zero AC appliances in this trailer beyond the 120 to the converter while at home for charging or connected to my generator while boondocking. I think in the past 20 years I've been to a campground with shore power connections only twice. Am I on the right track here? Ultimately I'm looking to setup a pure 12V power system on my trailer hopefully 90% of the time charged from my 200W solar setup. My draw should be minimal compared to my old TCs as I will have no inverter and no heavy draw appliances. Really just lights and fans (fantastic fan, propane furnace fan, window DC fan, USB charging station for phones/laptop). If the IOTA45 converter is simply properly bonded to my house 120V what purpose would the chassis ground serve?Re: 12V wiring Aluminum Cargo Trailer conversionShould I bolt a grounding block onto the aluminum frame? I saw comments of no copper against aluminum but what about a steel grounding block on the chassis?Re: 12V wiring Aluminum Cargo Trailer conversion CA Traveler wrote: Your link sounds like a concern for corrosion which can become a problem. Good maintained grounding would do the job. 10 ga is likely over kill for the running lights ground especially for LED lights. Are you going to use the TV to charge the trailer battery? Regardless I'd ground the 12V interior system including any incoming AC to the trailer. Aluminum conductivity would not be a concern for me but long term corrosion can be a issue. Trailer house batteries will be charged by solar and a IOTA 45 converter when connected to AC via either a generator or when at home. Exactly what do you mean regarding a well maintained grouding? Cleaning were it grounds to the frame from the batteries frequently?12V wiring Aluminum Cargo Trailer conversionBeen searching for days and haven't found a clear answer on whether or not a 12V system should be grounded to the chassis of a 100% aluminum framed enclosed trailer. Am I better running negative wires back from every light and fan back to the batteries or will the aluminum frame conduct well enough without corrosion? All my searches regarding grounding aluminum framed trailers talk about vehicle wiring from the truck back for running lights/directionals... This line actually says do not ground to the trailer chassis: Aluminum trailer grounding But my question is for a house 12v system unrelated to the tow vehicle.Re: Easily removable bed covers?That does look simple. How does it hold up snow? Does it sag much? Do you have to clear it right aay?Easily removable bed covers?Been 5 years or so since I looked into this and never came up with a good option. Anything out there that can keep the elements out of your truck bed when not hauling TC but is easy enough to remove without disassembling the mounts? Would love a solution that doesn't require tools. Most soft covers close in the width of the rails which I can't do with the Lance on the GMC, barely enough room as it is, TC is a tight fit. Doesn't have to lock or anything fancy.Re: help with truck to camper connectorI don't think the 5 front roof marker lamps plus the five red rear lamps and the running lights in the break lights on the camper would all just quit at once. All were working when I left for wknd, none when I drove home. I think the truck is fine from the test I ran today. Possible the plug from the camper needs to be cleaned somehow.Re: help with truck to camper connectorSo truck plug is fine, lights my test light right up with 12v and running lights pin. Now time to trouble shoot the camper wiring. Since I have brake lights and directionals on the camper does that mean my 12v is good or do they function off the 12v from the camper batteries and only running lights and charging needs 12v from truck? Trying to narrow down where to look
GroupsTravel Trailer Group Prefer to camp in a travel trailer? You're not alone.Feb 06, 202544,025 Posts