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   rec.outdoors.rv-travel      Discussions related to recreational vehi      163,830 messages   

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   Message 163,054 of 163,830   
   Technobarbarian to All   
   Re: trailer questions   
   02 May 24 07:02:12   
   
   From: technobarbarian@gmail.com   
      
   In article , ganthony@gmail.org says...   
   >   
   > On 5/1/2024 6:37 PM, Ted Heise wrote:   
   > > On Tue, 30 Apr 2024 17:07:58 -0700,   
   > >    Technobarbarian  wrote:   
   > >>   In article ,   
   > >>   technobarbarian@gmail.com says...   
   > >>>> I'm still not sold on this battery, but the dealer thought   
   > >>>> it was (and should be) okay.  On the other hand, it was at   
   > >>>> 84% when I picked up the trailer on Saturday, and down to   
   > >>>> 70% after a couple of hours towing--with the 7-pin   
   > >>>> connected.  I checked the output at the towing vehicle, and   
   > >>>> it read ~14 V.  Not sure what to think about this matter.   
   > >>>   
   > >>>       Thanks for the update.   
   > >>>   
   > >>>       What you are describing sounds like an internal short in   
   > >>> the battery. The battery is likely to be covered under a   
   > >>> manufacturer's warranty. I'd suggest that you take it   
   > >>> somewhere that sells that brand and have them check it.   
   > >>   
   > >>        I had a second thought about your RV problems. It's   
   > >>   unusual for two components in a furnace to fail at the same   
   > >>   time. Along with you hinky battery I'm starting to wonder if   
   > >>   your RV got too much electical power at some point along the   
   > >>   way. If you don't have a surge protector you might want to   
   > >>   consider adding one.   
   > >   
   > > Good observation!  The dealer told me that only one of the two   
   > > parts was bad (sounded like they or Truma might not have been sure   
   > > which) and that it was best to just replace them both.   
   > >   
   >   
   > What ever happened to analysts, troubleshooters and problem solvers? All   
   > they are these days are parts changers.. especially for warranty work.   
   > That kind of stuff is not that hard to figure out if you have even a   
   > rudimentary knowlege of RV electrical systems.   
      
        They might have been right. Even if they were wrong, sometimes it's   
   best to err on the side of caution. If you screw up a furnace repair   
   it's possible for the furnace to self-destruct. If you get the right   
   mixture of propane and air in the furnace's combustion chamber, and a   
   delayed spark, the resulting explosion will ruin the furnance. I've only   
   seen this once and the damage was limited to the furnace. That was back   
   in the early days of electronic ignition.   
      
          You should also keep in mind that traditionally RV techs are   
   poorly paid. I had to get out of wrenching on RVs because I could make   
   better money doing anything else. The result is that most RV techs are   
   young men who don't have a lot of experience. Most of the time they got   
   all of their training on the job.   
      
         And repairing RVs isn't as simple as you think it is. These days   
   to properly check the circuit board in a furnace you need a fancy bit of   
   test equipment that the dealership may or may not have available. Back   
   in the early days circuit board failures were common. That ended a long   
   time ago.   
      
   TB   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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