Does anyone have any clever ideas for knowing if you're plugged into 110v or not? I have had several occasions where we plugged into power at the campground, and either forget to throw the breaker to turn on the power or turned on the wrong one on the campground power box. Since all our lights and accessories are 12v, we usually don't notice until a couple hours later when we wonder why the fridge isn't cold yet, or the battery starts to run out and the lights go dim. Does anyone else have this problem with their vintage, mostly 12v unit? As far as I can tell the Intellipower just sits there and blinks whether it's plugged into shore power or not. Is there any other easy way to tell if you're plugged in?
Does anyone have any clever ideas for knowing if you're plugged into 110v or not? I have had several occasions where we plugged into power at the campground, and either forget to throw the breaker to turn on the power or turned on the wrong one on the campground power box. Since all our lights and accessories are 12v, we usually don't notice until a couple hours later when we wonder why the fridge isn't cold yet, or the battery starts to run out and the lights go dim. Does anyone else have this problem with their vintage, mostly 12v unit? As far as I can tell the Intellipower just sits there and blinks whether it's plugged into shore power or not. Is there any other easy way to tell if you're plugged in?
Stef,
Plug a night light into one of the 110V outlets or turn on the A/C. If you have a microwave, see if the clock blinks 12:00.
Bill
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Bill Kerfoot, WBCCI/VAC/CAC/El Camino Real Unit #5223
Just my personal opinion
1973 Dodge W200 PowerWagon, 1977 Lincoln Continental
1979 23' Safari, and 1954 29' Double Door Liner Orange, CA
Actually there is a little tester that you can plug into your outlet that will tell you if your polarity is correct. If all the little lights are green, everything is fine. If the polarity is wrong, it will let you know....I don't know what it is called....perhaps a polarity tester but I keep one handy and use it each time we hook up.....it let's you know if there is something not right with the 110 hookup.....paula
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Suite Spot
WBCCI # 22353 Air#13593
1968 28'Ambassador
Why not just look at your monitor panel or fridge?
Bill
Spoken like someone with a newer trailer Caravels don't have monitor panels, and the fridge has no readouts or lights of any kind. But I did find a little led nightlight for now and plugged it in next to the intellipower and it lit up when I plugged the trailer in, so I think that will do the trick for the moment. I like the idea of one of those poliarity testers too, I'll have to look for one of those.
Richard, is that a plug-in meter or actually part of the outlet. The perspective throws me off.
Stephanie, I keep one of these plugged into an unused outlet visible from the door of my Safari. Like Richard's, the bonus is that it tells me if I have a voltage brownout and better not run the A/C. [ We won't tell the rest of the country how little we have to run our A/C...] I also keep an eye on whether the auto-set fridge switches away from electric and over to gas.
I have three of those luminous? type nightlights that sort of glow blue or green, come in very small sizes and also come in multi packs. I have one plugged in the bathroom, an outlet near the floor by the entry door and one in the kitchen. they give off a very soft glow but just enough illumination to make your way into the bathroom or get up to get a drink. My newer A/S does not have a "power on" light on the monitor panel.
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WBCCI 24291
New England Unit
Metropolitan NY Unit