eggsalad wrote:no, No, NO.
You want to keep the camper's 12V system totally isolated from your tow vehicles 12V system.
bdosborn wrote:eggsalad wrote:no, No, NO.
You want to keep the camper's 12V system totally isolated from your tow vehicles 12V system.
Why is that? It's required by the NEC and RVIA to ground the battery to the frame...
Bruce
bdosborn wrote:It's more of an issue with 120V than with 12V but here's one good reason:
Hot Skin Issue
On the 12V side, grounding the frame is more for electrical devices that might use the frame as a return path but there's a safety issue as well. Even though there aren't any known electrocution deaths in the US from voltages lower than 48V DC, it doesn't hurt to ground the frame. The idea is to have a fuse blow if a hot wire ever lands on the frame, rather than have the frame unknowingly energized and you complete a circuit with a wrench or through the trailer hitch.
Bruce
eggsalad wrote:bdosborn wrote:It's more of an issue with 120V than with 12V but here's one good reason:
Hot Skin Issue
On the 12V side, grounding the frame is more for electrical devices that might use the frame as a return path but there's a safety issue as well. Even though there aren't any known electrocution deaths in the US from voltages lower than 48V DC, it doesn't hurt to ground the frame. The idea is to have a fuse blow if a hot wire ever lands on the frame, rather than have the frame unknowingly energized and you complete a circuit with a wrench or through the trailer hitch.
Bruce
I'll buy that for a dollar. And I'll tell you what... if I *was* camping with 120VAC, I'd sure as heck drive a ground stake just to be sure. Campground AC has been known to be sketchy!
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