- Joined
- Jan 19, 2021
- Messages
- 3,608
- Location
- Rosemary Farm
- RV Model
- Between RVs
- TOW/TOAD
- Toadless
- Fulltimer
- No
Yes it can be by-passed/abandoned and that’s what I would do but I can’t advise you on how to do it other than get a qualified person there to determine what was done to retro this stuff in, undo whatever that is, re-wire it the way it came from the factory, and start over.Hi Rich
I have attached the photo's of the Inverter and the UPS connected to it. Yes, it came with the RV and no manual for it. Not sure where I got 4000W, must have been a typo error.
When the shore power is off, the inverter is still on, but, the AC is down and the AC (flashing) but, the UPS is down. The UPS is plugged into shore power. All 120V in the RV is down.
Is there any way to bypass these and have shore power direct to the RV?
Thanks
Valtyn
Given your semi-permenant status with shore power, all you need is the ability to plug in with a shore cord. You don’t need an inverter, and unless you have frequent power outages or sensitive computer stuff, you don’t need UPS either. The UPS was probably chosen as a boondocking battery bank (and has its own inverter?) and the inverter, as stated above, is to make 120v ac from your house 12v dc batteries. Niether of which you need if you can simply plug in to a pedestal or whatever.
It might be a worthwhile challenge to get this stuff cooperating and working properly if you hadn’t noted that it is over-heating and smells like burning electrical. Your inverter indicates power coming from solar (do you have solar panels?), it shows the inverter is on, and also shows it by-passing. Maybe because of the UPS wired in somewhere along the way? Hard saying from here.
But given that, the above mentioned conditions, and the fact that you don’t seem to have 120v ac coming from the unit(s), this tells me either something is wrong with the equipment or its hooked up wrong. Either way, unless you are good with electricity and a multi-meter, my advice is still to shut it all down and call an electrician.