Mustang11s
Well-known member
Just use one of these cords. Gives you 2 30amp 120v legs with 2 outlets per leg. Keep one in my frunk.
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You mean the dust?I want to know how you got that gorgeous background on your dash screen!
That adapter still only uses 1 leg of the inverterYou've definitely getting that Lightning to work for you. I wonder if this adapter off the L14-30 would slow the trip while handling the startup current?
https://www.amazon.com/Adapter-Distribution-Locking-Household-Protection/dp/B09P3GX6DM/
Guilty!Am I the only one hoping I would see a Lightning turning into Optimus Prime by clicking on this post?
I think it would still power your mixer. The 120V would be fed thru a 30A breaker instead of a 20.That adapter still only uses 1 leg of the inverter
actually, it shows that 2 of the 120v 20amp outlets are on one 'leg' of the 240v output(black wire), and the other two on the other 'leg'(red wire).... so, any of the outlets could potentially receive up to the full 30amps of 120v 'leg' of power... the breaker of the truck(30amp) determines the max draw, even if the outlets, themselves, are only '20amp' style outlets...That adapter still only uses 1 leg of the inverter
Interesting. I figured as conservative as Ford seems to be, that they would limit the 120V receptacles to 20A, either with a circuit breaker or software.actually, it shows that 2 of the 120v 20amp outlets are on one 'leg' of the 240v output(black wire), and the other two on the other 'leg'(red wire).... so, any of the outlets could potentially receive up to the full 30amps of 120v 'leg' of power... the breaker of the truck(30amp) determines the max draw, even if the outlets, themselves, are only '20amp' style outlets...
It doesn't trip the 20.amp breaker. breakers are designed to be tripped by heat. The inverter has 0 overload so for a split second I bet it pulls 5 to 6000 watts and the inverter can't handle it. It's a high frequency inverter not low. So it's mossfet based not transformer. Which means it sucks for inductive loadsInteresting. I figured as conservative as Ford seems to be, that they would limit the 120V receptacles to 20A, either with a circuit breaker or software.
Was it an inductive load. Probably not did it have a surge of 5-10,000 watts so 40 to 80amp surge doubt it.I have pulled 28 amps for several hours on one leg through the 30amp plug. No problem.
Modern breakers are thermo-magnetic. Magnetic for instantaneous high current, and thermal for sustained overloads. I have no idea what Ford is using.It doesn't trip the 20.amp breaker. breakers are designed to be tripped by heat. The inverter has 0 overload so for a split second I bet it pulls 5 to 6000 watts and the inverter can't handle it. It's a high frequency inverter not low. So it's mossfet based not transformer. Which means it sucks for inductive loads
Not having investigated how Ford has this implemented, it could all be done in software. IDKright, and these are not the typical 'breaker' we are used to seeing in our camper or home, they are 'resettable' breakers, maybe even more like 'switches'... they may be able to 'read' amperage, versus having to 'wait' for heat to come into play...