johnpsz
Well-known member
Here is my experience over the last few days of hooking my 30 amp RV up to a 20 amp circuit to run the AC, and it proves using the right wiring. When we first hooked it up we used a 30 amp household (15-20 amp plug) connector that we got with the camper as part of the dealer prep package and I have a cheap 100' extension cord (like 10 year old orange cord used a million times) that is on a real in my garage that I use for the electric leaf blower and hedge trimmers and etc. Anyhow, I figured I would just real that out to the trailer since the garage outlet was a 20 amp circuit (extension cord was only rated for 15 amp I believe, as most cheap ones are) and looking at my electrical panel on the RV the AC was on a 20 breaker so it should never really need more than that. Within 4 minutes of plugging in and starting the AC the breaker in the garage popped, I went the the garage reset the breaker and within a minute or less it popped again. My DW was a little upset because it was just under 100* outside and we had just had the trailer delivered the day before and she wanted to look around in it and it was very warm inside. I told her that I wanted to try a different extension cord on the same circuit and grabbed a 20 amp (thicker gauge wire) 20' extension cord and plugged it in and it was just about 2' too short to connect, luckily I also had a 25' one with the heavier gauge wire as well and hooked that one up. So now the trailer goes down my 20' 30 amp cable, down to the 1 foot 30 amp to household power connector, to a 25' heavy gauge extension cord hooked up to a 20 amp circuit. I went out and turned on the AC and it worked and never popped the breaker, I then noticed that the camp fridge is on AC only so as soon as the unit was plugged in it was cooling off too as well as charging the 12v batteries. So it seems like the correct size (both length and gauge wire) are essential for hooking up to a lower amperage outlet, and our trailer running with the system above can run the AC, camp kitchen fridge, charger for the 12v, and the TV without getting hot or tripping the breaker, but then again those were the only 110 items I tested at once.