daemonic3
Well-known member
- First Name
- Terry
- Joined
- Sep 22, 2020
- Threads
- 8
- Messages
- 1,693
- Reaction score
- 508
- Location
- Sacramento, CA
- Vehicles
- 2017 F150 3.5EB
- Occupation
- Engineer
- Thread starter
- #1
Well, it won't be me...
This is supposed to plug into my truck that is still sitting on its a$$ in Dearborn for no apparent reason. I can't wait to get this thing hooked up and experiment with the appliances and determining wattage and which circuit each AC is wired to. Plus what the thresholds are for kicking the engine on vs silent (battery) operation, etc.
The picture is a simple 12" dogbone connector (to give better strain relief than a solid adapter). It converts from the truck's 30A plug to the standard 50A trailer plug. Then I got a 15' extension cord. 10' is probably enough but I got 15' just in case. I have to go from the rear of my trailer (32' hitch to bumper) and the default cord is 30'. I also have a 50A surge guard that is about 18". My plan is to go, starting at the truck: dogbone, 15' extension, 18" surge guard, 30' shore power cord. This is 47.5' total length to go up and over the tailgate, down to the ground, and back up to the shore connector without too much strain.
I had hoped to share any findings and learnings as I did this as an early adopter but at this point I'll be the last adopter to do it. Same with hooking up the trailer with the reverse guidance and experimenting. If anyone else has done this stuff yet let's see it!
This is supposed to plug into my truck that is still sitting on its a$$ in Dearborn for no apparent reason. I can't wait to get this thing hooked up and experiment with the appliances and determining wattage and which circuit each AC is wired to. Plus what the thresholds are for kicking the engine on vs silent (battery) operation, etc.
The picture is a simple 12" dogbone connector (to give better strain relief than a solid adapter). It converts from the truck's 30A plug to the standard 50A trailer plug. Then I got a 15' extension cord. 10' is probably enough but I got 15' just in case. I have to go from the rear of my trailer (32' hitch to bumper) and the default cord is 30'. I also have a 50A surge guard that is about 18". My plan is to go, starting at the truck: dogbone, 15' extension, 18" surge guard, 30' shore power cord. This is 47.5' total length to go up and over the tailgate, down to the ground, and back up to the shore connector without too much strain.
I had hoped to share any findings and learnings as I did this as an early adopter but at this point I'll be the last adopter to do it. Same with hooking up the trailer with the reverse guidance and experimenting. If anyone else has done this stuff yet let's see it!
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