![]() ![]() Educate yourself by finding out the total amp usage of each of your appliances.Įxample: A 7500 BTU air conditioner is nine amps, refrigerator on 120 volt three to five amps, microwave fifteen amps. You could charge, run your refrigerator on 120 and your air conditioner if it has a low BTU rating. If your batteries are low and need charging, you may need about seven amps to begin charging just your batteries. While your camper is plugged in to a household outlet you can run appliances while you charge your batteries, but caution must be used because you can overload the house outlet breaker. A household 120-volt outlet is 15 or 20-amps and can charge your batteries easily. Jim: You can charge your batteries by plugging your camper into a household 120-volt electric outlet at home or a campground. ![]() TCM: How do you charge your camper batteries? Some individuals actually run their coffee pot’s off their inverter. You can also buy a 12-volt inverter which will allow you to use your battery’s 12-volt power to run and charge your 120-volt laptop, electric razors, and cell phones. Other things can run off your 12-volt DC battery power including 12-volt televisions, 12-volt entertainment systems, 12-volt air compressors, etc. However, it’s not recommended that you power your refrigerator from your batteries since it draws over 10-amps an hour (a very high rate). Jim: You can run your lights, furnace heater fan, water pump, and DC-powered refrigerator off your camper batteries. TCM: In a truck camper, what can you run off your batteries? Plugging in your truck camper to shore or household AC power also allows you to power household items within your camper including hair dryers, coffee makers, microwaves, and air conditioners. Shore or household power is 120-volts and is what we use to charge our truck camper batteries through a built-in AC to DC power converter. “It’s not recommended that you power your refrigerator from your RV batteries since it draws over 10-amps an hour.” Jim: Your truck camper’s 12-volt DC electric power system includes a 12-volt battery and 12-volt converter and allows a truck camper to run its 12-volt components free from shore or household power. TCM: Truck campers have 12-volt and 120-volt systems. He is our go to guy with any camper electrical question. He also ran a successful electronics business for fifteen years, which he sold and then retired. He went on to pursue electronics in high school and was involved in what he calls, “unusual electronic technology” while serving in the Navy.įrom 1969 to 1989 he was involved in every aspect of the IBM mainframe computer industry from tubes to ICs, bytes to terabytes. He told us that he loved to take things apart and put them back together. At age nine, Jim built a tube radio that ran on a 90-volt battery. Jim has been involved with electronics since he was a kid. LED Int.With his deep knowledge of both electronics and truck camping, we talked to Jim Tomblin about camper batteries and truck camper electrical systems. Optional Off-Road Package (2107LS, 2308LS and 1760LS Only)Įxterior Wall Mount LP w/Quick Connect (Optional) The load capacity of your unit is designated by weight, not by volume, so you cannot necessarily use all available space when loading your unit. A label identifying the unloaded vehicle weight of the actual unit and the cargo carrying capacity is applied to every Forest River RV prior to leaving our facilities. **Estimated Average based on standard build optional equipment.Įach Forest River RV is weighed at the manufacturing facility prior to shipping. Available CCC should accommodate fresh potable water (8.3 lbs per gallon).īefore filling the fresh water tank, empty the black and gray tanks to provide for more cargo capacity. *Estimated Average based on standard build optional equipment.ĬCC (Cargo Carrying Capacity)** - is the amount of weight available for fresh potable water, cargo, additional optional equipment and accessories.ĬCC is equal to GVWR minus UVW. The UVW does not include cargo, fresh potable water, additional optional equipment or dealer installed accessories. It includes all weight at the unit’s axle(s) and tongue or pin and LP Gas. UVW (Unloaded Vehicle Weight)*- is the typical weight of the unit as manufactured at the factory. ![]() GAWR (Gross Axle Weight Rating) – is the maximum permissible weight, including cargo, fluids, optional equipment and accessories that can be safely supported by a combination of all axles. ![]()
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