Ladiver
Well-known member
Jeff,
The rattle you are hearing is the fuel pump sucking air!
Yep, reconnected the fuel tank and no more clicking. Thanks.
Jeff,
The rattle you are hearing is the fuel pump sucking air!
So frustrated. I think I am almost ready to throw in the towel and have a service center took at it.
Last thing I am going to do is check for loose wires at the converter.
Why are you checking the power converter? Also, I didn't understand why you had video of the Magnum Controller.
What failure symptoms do you still have?
The Power Converter changes 110V AC to 12V DC, so I don't know what that would have to do with anything.
If you have a loose or high resistance connection coming into the transfer switch (or at the junction box between generator and transfer switch), that might be causing a problem. If voltage on the L1 wire at the transfer switch connection drop to around 104V, the circuit board will interpret that as the generator shutting down and will drop the transfer switch contactors.
Be very cautious working on an open transfer switch. If you make a mistake, there's enough power there to seriously injure or kill. You might find it worth using a $20 non-contact voltage tester before getting your hands on the box, just in case the box itself is carrying current due to a malfunction. While unlikely, for $20 you can be safe. Non-contact testers are available at most hardware stores. Skip the $10 tester and go for the better $20 unit.
Also, as a good safety practice, since you don't have any lockouts, make sure you know who else is around the RV and that they know not to push any buttons while you're working.
That explains why the power to the coach is shut off during the surge of the generator, but that still does not address the generator surge in the first place. To me, it sound like the transfer switch is doing exactly what it is supposed to do.
The open question is whether the generator surge is the cause or the effect.
One of two things
If the transfer switch is engaging and disengaging then you should hear it "clunk" each time it engages. It may also rattle or chatter while trying to re engage.
Here is a typical Inverter/charger installation, compare it to yours.
1) Both shore power and generator power lead into the transfer switch,
2) out of the transfer switch, power goes to the main panel,
3) from there either one leg or both legs (optional) goes to the inverter and then passes through the inverter to a sub panel.
4) which in turn, runs what ever appliances are controlled by that sub panel.
5) The inverter charges the batteries with its internal charger with electricity it is receiving from the main panel and passing through to the sub panel.
7) When the transfer switch drops out (for whatever reason) the power to the inverter is interrupted.
8) Since there is no power to the inverter there is no pass through. or charging
9) No matter which leg the inverter is on L1, L2 or both, the inverter cannot direct power to the charger OR feed the air conditioner or any other appliance.
10) The only relationship between the inverter charger and the air conditioner fan unit is the transfer switch and the main panel. (or the inverter if the AC fan runs off the Pass through).
11) What you have here is the airconditioner and the inverter quitting simultaneously and independently from one another because the power from the generator is not getting past the main breaker panel.
12) since you are not having to reset breakers, that tells me that the transfer switch is the problem.
Question? My xantrex monitor has a readout that tells me if my AC electricity is valid and how many volts and hertz the power is, regardless of the source. Do you have such a read out? and if so what is it telling you with the generator running and no appliances running. And are you sure that the breakers in your main panel and your sub panel are not tripped?
SOLUTION FOUND! (I think)
After all of my trouble shooting, I figured it was a generator problem. I took the rig to the shop and had them test everything and see if they could find the problem. What they found was that the EMS was the culprit for preventing power to the rig. This was happening when the power draw of the rig was greater than what the generator could supply. When the generator was running, it not only was supplying power to the rig, but also the battery charger. This caused too much draw and caused the EMS to kick in (< 20 amps).
After speaking with Progressive, they said there was another customer with a very similar setup that had similar problems when their battery was too low. I have been able to replicate the problem with a low battery. When the batteries are full, I can run 2 air conditioners and the microwave at the same time and not lose power.
The solution is to keep the batteries topped off, or make sure the charger is Off (standby), when trying to run heavy loads off the generator. I am not sure why this happens, and I don't think I like that solution, but at least I now know what the cause is. If I am dry camping and using the inverter for power. I just need to make sure to re-charge the batteries first, before using the air conditioner.