Quote:
Originally Posted by lspotho
Thanks - I was thinking it might be somewhere else in the electrical system - but your message reminds me to consider the obvious answer first!
Dan
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I don't know if you ever got your answer, but another thing to try...
I assume that you have something that is in fact causing the breaker to trip inside the RV. Easy fix is as others have suggested as to avoid a GFCI circuit. I have not encountered that, but next time i have RV I will purposely plug into GFCI breaker just to see what happens.
Given it is happening and you just wish to know why, you may try to plug one of the AC testers into every electrical socket in the coach to see if you see a wiring issue?
If your coach is under warranty a dealer may look at? In my GFCI tripping case it was wired properly, but nicks on wiring insulation along with some obvious moisture corrosion (it wasn't wet though). I put a new cover with new sealing insulation on the receptacle that I found to be culprit.