Electrical Fire caused by shorted 7-wire cord

rhodies1

Well-known member
Good day fellow Heartlanders,
Posting this tread for your info.
While dry camping this past weekend, we experienced a fire caused by the 7 prong 12 volt electrical cord,
I store my cord up inside the 5 th wheel tongue on my unit and have since it was new in 2012 with no issues.
On Sunday I reached up and hung cord down getting ready to hook up,I went to back of unit to do other items and could smell electrical burning.
Looked around unit and noticed smoke coming out from under nose of unit, ran up and electrical cord and metal box with all 12 volt wires on fire, managed to extinguish quickly but it burned 5 wires and cord about 6 in long. The electrical cord was shorted out against clamp going into box,melted clamp completely and part of box, electrical cord remains powered even when dry camping because of your batteries.
Upon inspection I noticed the cord was wore at the point of entry into the metal box,this wearing was caused from continuous flexing when turning unit over the years..
Maybe worth taking a minute to look at your cord for wear.
 

danemayer

Well-known member
Re: Electrical Fire

Not having the umbilical cord plugged into the tow vehicle, I believe the only powered wire into the junction box would be the emergency breakaway circuit. It must have shorted to the frame or box. But that alone should not have started a fire.

At the battery end of the breakaway wire, I think there is an automatic 12V mini-circuit breaker that would trip in the event of a short. It should have tripped, reset after a few seconds, and tripped again, and again. The fire indicates something is wrong at that end.

You should inspect for presence of that breaker and if you don't have one, add one. if you do have one, you should assume it's no longer able to trip and it needs to be replaced.
 

JohnDar

Prolifically Gabby Member
Re: Electrical Fire

There is an excellent thread on replacing that crappy metal box with a plastic one, along with a coiled cord and a holder for the plug. Jesstalkin’ I believe was the author. I replaced mine per his tutorial.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

mlpeloquin

Well-known member
Re: Electrical Fire

I do not think that the break away switch has a fuse or breaker. It defeats the purpose of the last resort to apply the breaks when a trailer or fifth wheel would break loose. Nothing should be between the battery/power source and the breakaway switch or the breaks.
 

danemayer

Well-known member
Re: Electrical Fire

I do not think that the break away switch has a fuse or breaker. It defeats the purpose of the last resort to apply the breaks when a trailer or fifth wheel would break loose. Nothing should be between the battery/power source and the breakaway switch or the breaks.

I understand your point, but it's a choice of which safety issue to live with. With no breaker, if the wire shorts in between battery and switch, and there's no breaker, the trailer may burn to the ground and you could be in it. With a breaker, a double failure would have to occur for someone to be injured or killed by the trailer. The hitch would have to fail and the breaker would have to fail.

So to me, it's a single failure scenario versus a double failure scenario. I think Heartland has been installing breakers for a while. But of course I could be wrong.
 

wdk450

Well-known member
Actually, I added a 25 amp self-resetting circuit breaker just downstream (towards the trailer battery) of the umbilical termination box on the tow vehicle charging line of my 2008 Bighorn due to the fact that my 30 amp towed vehicle charging circuit fuse in my 2004 Dodge Ram 3500 kept blowing intermittently, with no indication to me that my trailer was no longer getting battery charging voltage while travelling. This has been in place over 2 years, and the truck fuse has not blown since then.

I thought this configuration to be the best compromise in ensuring that my trailer's battery system was getting charging voltage while travelling. The breaker size was selected to give the best possibility of the trailer self-resetting breaker tripping before the truck fuse blows.

BTW, when I park the trailer, I simply drape the umbilical cord over the hitch, with the 7 way connector hanging downward to keep water out of it. This doesn't put any stress on the umbilical cable at the interconnect box.
 

danemayer

Well-known member
Probably not. The circuit protection is near the source(the truck, a fuse) and not the load(the battery) when the circuit is connected.
The truck fuse won't help you when the truck is not connected and the wire from the battery shorts to ground.
 

Flick

Well-known member
The truck fuse won't help you when the truck is not connected and the wire from the battery shorts to ground.

The protection from a hot wire is of most importance. Circuit protection would or should have saved the OP from any damage. It’s a very unique situation to have to fuse both ends.
 

SNOKING

Well-known member
Re: Electrical Fire

Not having the umbilical cord plugged into the tow vehicle, I believe the only powered wire into the junction box would be the emergency breakaway circuit. It must have shorted to the frame or box. But that alone should not have started a fire.

At the battery end of the breakaway wire, I think there is an automatic 12V mini-circuit breaker that would trip in the event of a short. It should have tripped, reset after a few seconds, and tripped again, and again. The fire indicates something is wrong at that end.

You should inspect for presence of that breaker and if you don't have one, add one. if you do have one, you should assume it's no longer able to trip and it needs to be replaced.

Wait one. The charge 12V lead from the truck goes to the trailer batteries. So there is 12V on that lead from the trailer when not plugged into the truck. That is how people put a jumper or flasher in the trailers cable to turn on the clearance lights or blink that to drive other campers crazy.
 

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rhodies1

Well-known member
Re: Electrical Fire

There is an excellent thread on replacing that crappy metal box with a plastic one, along with a coiled cord and a holder for the plug. Jesstalkin’ I believe was the author. I replaced mine per his tutorial.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

John. Just received my new cord and box assembly today from Amazon.
 

wdk450

Well-known member
I was just thinking over my circuit breaker add-on, and I screwed up on 1 detail: FUSES OR CIRCUIT BREAKERS SHOULD BE AS CLOSE TO THE POWER SOURCE (TRAILER BATTERY) AS POSSIBLE TO MINIMIZE LENGTHS OF UNPROTECTED HOT WIRING. I need to move that circuit breaker on the battery charging wire to the trailer battery end of the wire from the umbilical termination box where it is now.
 

JohnDar

Prolifically Gabby Member
Re: Electrical Fire

John. Just received my new cord and box assembly today from Amazon.

It's a relatively simple modification. Just test and label the OEM wires before disconnecting so you can match them to the new cord. The colors are not necessarily the same but the pin positions are.
 
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