I too asked for schematics heartland said it was proprietary. ..
Proprietary
Remove a basement wall and you'll see why it is proprietary. I doubt the person/s that did the wiring could even figure out what they did and draw up a wiring schematic.
What schematics did you request. They typically do give out the coax drawings but I've never seen them give out electrical. If you weren't specific, they might have thought you wanted the electrical.
Even when given coax schematics, ours were not entirely correct. Our location for the wiring to the roof was not located where the schematics said, but was perfect for where we ended up locating the satellite to avoid hitting the bathroom vent cover and the AC shroud when doing its rotation.
Don't waste your time with coax schematic, odds are good that although it may be correct, the trailer was not wired following it.
Our trailer had no SAT coax installed from the factory.
And the splitters - IIRC I had 4 splitters for the cable, and that didn't work very well.
Thanks for your quick reply. I see what you are saying. I have been testing that and have found that only two inputs in the UDS box come in for receivers to connect, however, in under storage and garage, there are 2 coax outputs. I only assumed one was for satellite, besides antenna/cable but it appears I may be wrong. There are 3 coax attachments at entertainment center, I have mapped one to be satellite in and another to be antenna/cable, so it may be a possibility the third is a coax distribution to underbelly and garage from third coax port in entertainment center?
My best suggestion is start from scratch. Get some quality cable (see my post above for the Belden stuff) and compression connectors and the proper crimper.
You didn't mention which SAT company you are using, it may make a difference on how you run the coax.
And if it is DirecTV, are you using the newer Genie Single LNB SWM stuff or the older multi LNB antenna?
I have DirecTV with the 'wired' Genie clients (they require a coax to each client, newest version is wireless), so I have a ONE DirecTV splitter (only one splitter) at the UDC and from there runs to the living room (where my DVR - receiver is), the bedroom and the door side basement.
The coax used for the cable from the factory was actually a high quality coax with the cheapest screw on connectors. I replaced all the connectors for the cable and TV antenna.
I have one coax coming from the roof to the UDC (I only need one with the SWM). The UDC with the two SAT connectors is there for you to choose rooftop or portable antenna on the ground.
Looking at mine, the left side is the coax from the roof, the right side goes to the top port of the DirecTV splitter. When using the rooftop dish I use a 5" jumper coax between those two connectors. When I use my portable antenna I disconnect the jumper and connect the ground antenna to the left side.
Most of the DirecTV wiring I found on a google search looks wrong. The picture below is one I found that is fairly close for a DirecTV single LNB SWM system with wired Genie clients.
Keep in mind with the splitter, there is a specific port that goes to the antenna and a specific port that gets the coax from the power inserter.
Defects noticed so far:
Electrical breaker labeling is wrong... Or wiring wrong, take your pick
Not a defect, it's a lack of knowledge.The folks building the RV's are not electricians and the odds are good they do not understand balanced loads or the reason electrical wiring is done the way it is when done correctly.
I would suggest checking to see what you actually have. Yourself if capable or an electrician.
On our trailer when new, only one was pair of breakers was mislabeled, But most of the loads were on one leg of the panel. Both AC's, the water heater, the converter and the washer dryer combo. Needless to say, that didn't work well and almost everything in the panel was re-wired.