bdosborn wrote:Oops, I missed the electric burners. A 30A circuit will be required if he wants to use the burner and have his electric fridge plugged in too. The problem with the 30A is that campgrounds are the only place that you'll find them. I bet he doesn't have one in his garage so any propane savings will go to the electrician if he wants to plug in at home. He also won't be able to pick up an extra extension cord easily or cheaply if he needs one ( I forget things at home a lot). He'll also need an a pretty big RV generator if he wants to do any boondocking, since most generators don't have a 120V, 30A receptacle. If campgrounds with electric service is the ONLY place you camp, the 30A is fine. If you want maximum flexibility, the 20A is a much better choice.
Bruce
I doubt he will do much camping in his driveway. Yes, it is true that the 120 V 30 amp plug is pretty unique to the RV industry, buy I don't understand why that is a problem. If he does want to plug in at home he only needs to adapt down to the standard plug for that purpose. (you can put 20 amps of power through a 30 amp cord with no problem. Just don't try to do it the other way around.) Adapters are available in every RV supply house I have ever been in. Just keep in mind one thing, every electrical system is only as strong as it's weakest link. For safety's sake, you shouldn't draw more than 80% of what a circuit is capable of delivering. Remember, you are drawing power through an extension cord an that is why you need that safety factor. When hooked to a 20 amp circuit with a 12 gauge extension cord you should't be drawing more than 16 amps. With the two burner stove pulling it's maximum of 12.2 amps, that doesn't leave a lot left for the coffee pot, refrigerator, microwave, curling iron, tv, battery charger, electric blanket, etc., etc., etc. The bottom line here is this simple fact. The campground charges you the same amount for the electric regardless of which plug you use. It's there, you paid for it, go ahead and use it. I'm not suggesting you waste it, but if you like electric stuff, make sure your trailer is equipped to handle it. Peace.
Also, please don't confuse 30 amp 120 volt plugs with 30 amp 240 volts plugs. They might look similar but they are very very different. By today's standard 240 volt plugs will have 4 prongs. That has not always been the case and there are some 240 volt plugs out there that do look an awful lot alike the 30 amp 120 volt plugs. Mix them up and you are going to need a fire extinguisher.