My DC system is fairly simple. It is a computer power supply plugged into an AC outlet. The AC outlet is the only line on a 15 amp mini circuit breaker.
The DC system provides power to two overhead incandescent lights, one LED reading light over the bed, an incandescent porch light, and a Fantastic Fan.
The two overhead DC lights are in parallel on the same feeder circuit and a single DC fuse of 4 amps.
Each of the DC circuits goes through a DC fuse ranging from 4 to 6 amps.
The problem comes when I turn on the rear overhead light and it causes the circuit breaker to trip. None of the DC fuses are blown.
I can be running all of the other DC fixtures with no problem but when I turn on the rear overhead light, it trips the breaker.
It also trips the breaker if I only have the front overhead light on and nothing else running.
Now, the vexing part. When I get it home to work on it it is working fine with no problems.
I took the rear light apart and can see no obvious problem with loose or shorted wires.
I'm not an electrician but I don't understand how a single DC light can cause the AC breaker to trip but it does not blow the DC fuses.
And the fact that it is an intermittent thing that seems to come and go.
It did this one time on a previous camping trip but it was near the end of the trip and I could find nothing wrong when I got it home.
On my latest trip, it did it early in the trip and stayed that way for the last two days of the trip until I get it home again and now it's working fine.
Here is an early pic of my system. The black wire on the left is a temporary AC power supply feeding the breaker box. The two wires going off to the right are the circuit that feeds the two overhead lights. The DC fuse block is in the middle between the AC breaker box and the computer power supply.