Well, I managed to wire up and test mostly all of my AC Sockets. 3 I ran wire and will wire up when I build the back cabinet. One of these is for AC and the other two are just generic outlets. In total I wired and tested 9 sockets. When all said and done, I will have 12 AC Sockets.
I ended up using 3 circuits for the AC. One circuit for the left side, one for the right side, and one for the AC. I imagined myself going ore complex with this at first, but I decided to keep it simple.
Right Side of sockets installed, tested, and working:
Random picture of socket:
Left side of sockets installed, tested, and working:
All wiring to power center
Wiring Along wall
Ac wiring:
Generic picture of the rig after ac was done:
I had big gaps on the sides of my floor, so I used this roof stuff that worked out pretty well to seal them:
Electricty seems to be a little scary at first, but it wasn't really that bad. The first couple sockets were a pain. I did use GFCI sockets as the first socket for each circuit. After the first couple it wasn't bad. I learned that it is best to just keep things simple. I had a complex way of wiring the sockets where if one failed the all stood on, but this used up much more wire and was a pain for me. So I ended up just wiring the sockets together and it seemed to work and save wire.
One question on electricity, should you ground the AC from the Power center to the chassis of the trailer? I did not do this, and it seems to work. Anyone know if we should do this?
This upcoming week I will start wiring up all the DC stuff. I have a rocker switch unit I will use to set up the DC outlets. After the DC is wired, I may look at either building the cabinets for the kitchen or starting the bathroom.