Greg M wrote:...Then bad things happen, and all the smoke comes out of your stuff.
... and we know that it's the smoke that makes the stuff work, so you should never let it out!
The electronics guy's reason to avoid 120V AC and low-voltage DC wiring so close together is that all the wires act like antennas, and the DC wiring can pick up a 60 Hz "hum" from the AC wiring, which can go through some equipment power supplies can cause problems. My guess is that this is probably not a big deal anymore, but I don't know about that CPAP machine.
There is also a chance for confusion if you have a colour code system for AC (normally white=neutral, black=hot, red=alternate hot), and one for DC (in trailers this is commonly white=neutral, black=+12V, but sometimes is black=neutral and red=+12V)... the wrong wires can get connected together, since we're all just human. Keeping the two systems physically separate reduces the opportunities for thos unforgiving examples of Murphy's Law to take effect.
starleen2 wrote:There will be some that have done it with no problems, however, that doesn't mean it's right - i prefer to keep things separate to eliminate the possibility of problems -electricity is so silent until it strikes - you wouldn't run drinking water and sewer water in the same pipe - would you?

Well, it's not really the same pipe we're talking about here, but it's like running the drinking water and sewer water pipes side-by-side in the same trench. I agree, this seems like an invitation for unpleasantness.