betterdays
Member
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2018
- Posts
- 5
betterdays said:The only shore power I've seen is a female outlet connection, so I don't understand how I would do that. Am I supposed to have a male-to-male cord or something?
betterdays said:I have a 240 volt plug on the 'driver' side of the trailer that I've been using for 30 amp shore power. However, I have the two female outlets on the other side of the trailer with the placard I posted as an image attachment.
I thought those two outlets would be for plugging things into like lights/etc when connected to shore, but they don't work. So then I thought based on the wording maybe shore was supposed to be plugged into it but I don't understand that.
I thought those two outlets would be for plugging things into like lights/etc when connected to shore, but they don't work.
betterdays said:None of the outlets have GFCI on them. Is that handled in a different way on smaller trailers? It's a 2012 Riverside Whitewater 130
betterdays said:I have a 240 volt plug on the 'driver' side of the trailer that I've been using for 30 amp shore power. However, I have the two female outlets on the other side of the trailer with the placard I posted as an image attachment.
I thought those two outlets would be for plugging things into like lights/etc when connected to shore, but they don't work. So then I thought based on the wording maybe shore was supposed to be plugged into it but I don't understand that.
betterdays said:None of the outlets have GFCI on them. Is that handled in a different way on smaller trailers? It's a 2012 Riverside Whitewater 130
Lou Schneider said:You can also have a GFCI outlet inside the trailer, then have additional plain outlets daisy-chained beyond it that share it's GFCI protection.
Look in the kitchen or bathroom for a GFCI outlet that's tripped.