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Saturday, July 7, 2007

How Your Electrician Can Rig a 50 Amp RV Service

Parking your RV at a friend’s of relative’s house? What happens if you keep blowing fuses because your RV pulls more amps than the 15 amp circuit can supply? Heat wave not allowing you to use your air conditioner because you really need 50 amps to make it happen? Well, do not despair, help is as near as your local hardware store. Depending on the electric code of the state you live in, this job may be done several ways either as a temporary set-up or as a permanent outdoor 50 amp receptacle. Either way I highly recommend you hire a certified electrician to connect it for you because we are dealing with electricity here and it’s DANGEROUS if you don’t know what you’re doing. In reality, it’s dangerous even if you do know what you’re doing! A certified electrician will install your receptacle using the proper code guidelines for your state. That being said your electrician can put a 50 amp circuit breaker in the electric service box, hook up #6 wire to it and run it outside and into a weatherproof 2 gang (deep) box with a weatherproof cover and you are in business. In my case I could not route the romex #6 wire casing outside without tearing out the drywall around the box. Since we are only staying here a few days my brother-in-law and I decided to rig a temporary “emergency” set-up until a more permanent solution could be achieved. I bought about 10 feet of #6 romex wire which has four wires in a sheath. It consists of a ground wire, a white #6 common, a red #6 and a black #6 and costs around $2.50 per foot at Home Depot. I also purchased a 50 amp breaker that fit the electric service box and a 50 amp female receptacle that has its own self contained box. We basically made a heavy duty extension cord that comes right off the electrical service box. The electrician will remove the service cover and determine if there is room for a 50 amp breaker. In our case we removed a 40 amp breaker that wasn’t being used. We installed the receptacle after stripping the proper amount of wire off the romex. We removed about 16 inches of the romex cover to expose the wires that would be going to the breaker and service box. We stripped the tips of the wires and inserted the black into one side of the breaker and the red into the other side. It doesn’t matter which side your electrician puts the red or black wires on. Next we inserted the white common wire on the electric service common bar and also inserted the ground wire onto the ground bar in the box. All these connections are made secure by tightening screws down on the wires. How your electrician brings the wire out of the box to the receptacle depends on the local electric code. We inserted the breaker, tested the receptacle with a volt meter, plugged in the RV and flipped the breaker to the “on” position and have been enjoying refreshing air conditioning ever since. The way you test to make sure the receptacle is properly wired is to set you volt meter on AC to measure 240 amps. Place one lead into the receptacle where the black wire is and one where the red wire is and you should get a reading of 240 volts. Move the black test lead down to the common (white) wire and you should read 120. Now move the test lead that is on the red wire over to the black side while leaving the other test lead in the common (white) and you should read 120. Next move the lead on the black wire to the ground wire (the hole) and the other lead remains in the common (white – bottom blade) and you should read 0. If it checks out you’re good to go, if not, then trouble shoot the problem. Make sure the ground wire is in the green receptacle screw down holder and the common (white) is in the bottom blade position on the receptacle. Here is a link where you can learn more about how a 50 amp RV service is wired: RV Electric Service Warning: Do not attempt this as a do-it-yourself project; use a qualified electrician to install it for you. This information is only intended to inform you so you can speak intelligently to the electrician you hire to install your outlet. Jim Twamley

5 Comments:

  • Please be very careful to make sure it is 110 service not 220.... rv's run on 110. My friend had all the appliances replaced because a certified electican did not believe her.

    By Marge, at July 14, 2007 5:37 AM  

  • Our son solved this for us. He installed a 50-amp hookup in his garage. Love having an electrician in the family!

    When we go to his house, we just make sure we are in another state before the electric bill arrives.

    At least his six years in the Navy taught him something other than the beaches in Spain are BEAUTIFUL. (I don't think he was really looking at the beaches!)

    By M&M_Perry, at July 14, 2007 7:43 AM  

  • I believe the sentence should read 240 volts, not amps.

    The way you test to make sure the receptacle is properly wired is to set you volt meter on AC to measure 240 amps.

    By bkolquist, at July 14, 2007 9:30 AM  

  • Marge,

    50 amp (and only 50 amp) RV service outlets are 220 volts. RVs with 30 amp service must connect only to 110 volts. There must have been some other problem if your friend had an RV with 50 amp power.

    There should be a decal on the RV near the power cord that specifies the power requirements. 50 amp connections typically say something like 120/240 VAC 50 amp, 3 pole, 4 wire service.

    By Les, at July 14, 2007 11:51 AM  

  • Best advice here is to use an electrician, but here are the facts about 110 and 220. Virtually all homes are wired "split single phase" which means there are two hot wires coming into the house, plus neutral and ground. If you put a volt meter between either of these hot wires and neutral, you get 110 (actually 108-120) volts. If you put a volt meter BETWEEN the two hot wires, you will read 220 (actually 216-240) volts. An RV 50 amp plug, thus has both 110 volts and 220 volts available. In most RVs, appliances are 110 volts so they use one hot wire and neutral. The appliances in the RV are divided between the two hot legs, and should be roughly in balance. If you plug a range or other 220 volt appliance into the same RV outlet, it will use both hot wires and get 220 volts. So the first comment above can't be quite right--there is only one right way to wire a 50 amp outlet, and if done right, the RV will be fine. Do be sure that you turn OFF the breaker, then plug in, then turn it on. If the hot wires make contact before the neutral, it is possible to feed 220 volts to your RV appliances for a moment and this can destroy them. So turn off, hookup, then turn on!

    - Barclay
    (Electrical Engineer by training)

    By Barclay, at August 8, 2007 6:10 AM  

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