This morning we woke up to the trailer flooded from our toilet. The tubing for the toilets water supply had busted open and leaked water everywhere. I have spent all day draining water from everywhere in the trailer. As a result of this, the GFCI in the kitchen is Tripped and I can't fix it. The GFCI next to the bathroom sink was tripped, however I was able to fix it. I'm wanting to know, where I should look at that maybe holding water (possibly under the floor?), causing the GFCI to Trip. The inside of the trailer is completely dry now and I can't figure out what is causing it to trip. I followed the GFCI's power lines to run under the island in the kitchen, but can't see beyond that.
I will add, at the end of the day after drying everything, the GFCI in the kitchen would take about 5 seconds before tripping again, but I am noticing that the ceiling lights aren't turning on. I am wondering if there's a 3rd GFC that may be tripped? I can't find one, but don't know where else to look.
Only the microwave, vanity lights in bathroom, outlets in the bedroom, and outlets near the entertainment system have power. Nothing else has power (including ALL ceiling lights). Am I missing something? I have replaced all fuses in the unit and checked the circuit breaker for anything popped.
You mention both AC and DC power issues (lights are DC), I would start at the distribution panel. Mine is low enough that it would get quite wet in a flood as you describe.
Take down your basement walls and look for "Romex non metallic cable splice" connectors (or any other connector) possibly laying in a puddle of water or wet.
You may have to drop the coroplast and check underneath too. It's probably a good idea to do this anyway to dry it out down there.
First Alert makes a water alarm. We have them in the house and in the rig. We had a pipe break in the house one time. $70,000 damages.
Someone should assemble a collection of all those pictures people have posted of those burned cable splices and forward them to the appropriate person(s) at Keystone. Those things should be banned from use in RVs, if not from everywhere else.
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Bill & Patricia
Riley, our Golden
2007 3075RL (recently sold, currently without)
First, sorry to hear about the leak.
As Robert mentioned, lights are not associated with the ac receptacles. Go with his and Daryles suggestions for starters.
GFCI receptacles are historically poor quality and often will not reset after tripping several times. It sounds like you have a weak or damaged GFCI receptacle. I would replace it (they are relatively inexpensive) and retest.
I'm curious if you have brass or plastic fittings in the water distribution system. Your rig is the age when brass fittings from China were found to be defective.
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Jay, Bobbie, Daisy, Rosie
2018 Montana High Country 345RL
2018 Chevrolet Silverado 3500HD LTZ DRW
Take down your basement walls and look for "Romex non metallic cable splice" connectors (or any other connector) possibly laying in a puddle of water or wet.
You may have to drop the coroplast and check underneath too. It's probably a good idea to do this anyway to dry it out down there.
First Alert makes a water alarm. We have them in the house and in the rig. We had a pipe break in the house one time. $70,000 damages.
Hello, I have attached 2 photos, 1 from underneath the Fridge (which had the same cable you showed) and the other from the basement where the converter is. *Both of these areas were bone dry* I did remove 1 panel near the low point drain, which had a considerable amount of water trapped on top of the belly.
You mention both AC and DC power issues (lights are DC), I would start at the distribution panel. Mine is low enough that it would get quite wet in a flood as you describe.
Hello, thank you for your reply. Where would the distribution panel be located? I'm guessing near the breaker box panel?
The distribution panel is the circuit breaker and fuse panel where power is “distributed” to all the various circuits.
First I would use a voltmeter to verify you have 120 vac on the load side of all the circuit breakers and 12 vdc on the load side of all the fuses. A red light will indicate a blown fuse. A breaker handle moved just slightly off the ON position indicates a tripped breaker.
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Bill & Patricia
Riley, our Golden
2007 3075RL (recently sold, currently without)
I can't give advice on how to fix anything, but I'll suggest two more areas which which you could check for water: First, there's probably a GFCI outlet on the outside of your rig. My 2002 has one right by the door, protected by a flip-up plastic cover. Second, people sometimes have GFCI outlet trouble because water has collected in a junction box outside, under a slide.
Okay update - The GFCI in the kitchen I was able to reset this afternoon. However I am still having issues with DC power to work. The only breaker that is tripped is the water heater. I have looked outside for another GFCI but cannot find one. I will look under all of the slides as I didn’t before.
Okay update - The GFCI in the kitchen I was able to reset this afternoon. However I am still having issues with DC power to work. The only breaker that is tripped is the water heater. I have looked outside for another GFCI but cannot find one. I will look under all of the slides as I didn’t before.
There will not be a GFCI or a breaker for the DC power side of things, that's only on the AC side. DC uses fuses. Also, don't just go by the light in the fuse panel to determine if a fuse is blown. It will only light up when the fuse is blown AND there is a draw on the circuit, i.e. the lights are turned on at the switch. The red indicator light works by bypassing a blown fuse, so no draw, no light.
The upper part of your panel in the picture is DC power and has fuses for each circuit. The lower portion is AC power and has breakers like what you would have in a S&B home.
What I think Bill is saying is have you verified you actually have 12vdc power on the DC side of the distribution panel? If not, you could have a converter problem and/or battery problem.