8ball_99 wrote:Its not really the brand but the style.. Like others said just get a standard 3 Prong RV cord and hard wire it into either your converter if breaker box which ever your using.. But a hatch on the side of the trailer for the cord to pass through. Those marine twist lock cables look cool.. But they are very expensive and pointless. Every campground is going to have a standard outlet on either a 15 or 20 amp breaker a standard 30 amp RV and or a 50 plug.. If you use a twist lock you will also need an adapter. So you will still be plugging your trailer into the outlet with the standard plug.. Just matters if you want your cord to cost 50 bucks or 200 bucks. You want your adapters to be 8 bucks or 30?. A smaller trailer shouldn't need 50 amps, I wouldn't do less then 30 amps though. Like us our trailer has a microwave and Roof AC, I can run both on 30 but I would not be able to on a 20amp.. Even if you don't plan on having big stuff.. What if you end up with a coffe pot and a boot drying.. I Also carry both of those with us camping. They are very small but still use a fair amount of power..
8ball_99 wrote:You can get a hatch with a lock on it. Also this style hatch you can even have the cord away from the hole so you have to start feeding it from the inside if you want.. Mine isn't like that. I just built a box on the inside large enough for the cord. I wouldn't be that worried about someone taking your cord for copper. If they want it they will get it. But really there isn't all that much copper in a 30 amp cord. It might be 5 dollars or so worth of scrap.
Here is a picture of my electrical hatch with the cord sticking through. The one on the right is my water hook up. Ignore the dirty trailer we just got back sunday from a trip. It was also taken at sunrise so everything is orange..
pete42 wrote:I just used a 25 foot 30 amp cord hardwired into a junction box that went to the convertor panel.
when I did my old trailer years ago
If you want one that can be unpluged from the trailer then any brand name will work
some from marine supply shops cost more than some from trailer supply stores.
If you are planning on having a big AC unit then maybe a 50 amp is the way to go I have never needed
one that big in any of my trailers but 30 amp would be the lowest I would go with.
pete
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