Steven P Posted December 6, 2021 Share Posted December 6, 2021 Is 4V from ground to neutral at the power pedestal on 50A acceptable? The state park where I am has this on numerous pedestals. We have been here since early October and everything is currently going well. My surge protector gives zero errors and all my 120V is functioning well. My EMS remote panel has been flashing periodically and Intellitec thinks it's failing and not related to the 4V. The rest of the 50A pedestal checks out fine and the park installed all new plugs in the pedestal after I asked them about this. We checked 2 other nearby pedestals including one I was on for a few weeks and they show the same. Thanks, Steven Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dr4Film Posted December 6, 2021 Share Posted December 6, 2021 (edited) Steven, According to Mike Sokol, the RV Electricity Expert, you can have up to 3 volts on loaded circuits. So you are one volt off. Not sure if one volt is enough to worry about. I am not the expert but I know enough to be very dangerous to myself. LOL http://noshockzone.org/rv-electrical-safety-part-iii-outlets/ Don't know how to contact Mike directly to ask, sorry. Edited December 6, 2021 by Dr4Film 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chuck B 2004 Windsor Posted December 6, 2021 Share Posted December 6, 2021 There are 2 types of 30 amp receptacles. one is a 120 vote, the other is a 240 volt one. Make sure you test each one for the voltage you are using before plugging in. There have been many members on this group who used the wrong voltage receptacle thus frying their coach. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gary 05 AMB DST Posted December 6, 2021 Share Posted December 6, 2021 Don't know if it means anything but I took a 50 amp male plug and connected it to a two outlet box. Put a 120v circuit tester, the 3 light type, in each outlet and use it to test the pedestal outlet. For a 30 amp outlet I use the 30 to 50 amp adapter. Gary 05 AMB DST 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gary M Posted December 6, 2021 Share Posted December 6, 2021 Mike Sokol has a Facebook site. It’s called RV Electricity. You can post your questions there if you join. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gary Cole Posted December 7, 2021 Share Posted December 7, 2021 (edited) The measured voltage is due to impedance in the neutral conductor as the equipment conductor carrie no load unless there is a fault. When in doubt choose a space as close to the subfeed panel as possible. RV parks located on the coast are the ones to be vary of. The NEC recommends a combined voltage drop of no more than 5 percent feeder and branch circuits. I suppose that is the basis for the max 3 V recommendation. Edited December 7, 2021 by Gary Cole Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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