by Deeann » Thu May 29, 2014 1:14 am
Go ahead and use the crock pot, toaster, electric skillet, etc. outside. Your box should allow you to have enough power for the rv and the other outlet too.
Circuit breakers are designed to protect the wiring. The amount of current (amps) a wire can carry depends on it's size. You really would have to have an understanding of electricity and wiring practices to understand how the box is wired and what you can do with the outlets. My advice is not to worry too much about it. Use the 30amp for the rv, then use the regular outlet for whatever you want to do. If you pull too much current, the circuit breaker in the box will pop open. If that happens, lighten the load on the line (unplug something) then reset the breaker.
It doesn't make any difference where you plug the crock pot in. The power all comes over the same wires in the box. You can plug the crock pot into the outside outlet or one on the kitchen counter. It all comes from the same source. So plug in whatever you want, wherever you want. Don't worry about it.
If a campground has inadequate wiring then the power will sag when everyone turns their a/c on. This is a campground problem. It's like a garden hose that is 1" around. You can run lots of water through a 1" water hose. You can supply plenty of water to two or three users, but if you need to supply water to 25 people the 1" hose isn't big enough to do that so everyone's water pressure and flow drops down if they all turn on the faucet at the same time. To solve the problem you have to buy a bigger water hose. The same is true with electricity. If the campground doesn't have enough capacity, they can't supply the power you need so the current flow (amps) goes down and drags the voltage level with it.
Use the outlet. If you pop a circuit breaker in the box, do what I said above. Also, get a meter and check the voltage in the trailer if you want. If it sags below 110v, quit using the microwave (or whatever) and see if it goes up. If not you can check the voltage at the box. If it's low there too, it's a campground problem. Find another campground. An older campground is more likely to have inadequate power than the newer campgrounds that were wired for 50amp boxes to start with. Lots of campgrounds have problems with capacity because they have added 50amp boxes after the campground was built and they didn't do anything to increase their own ability to supply more power. In other words, they added more people to the water hose but didn't buy a bigger hose.
Hope this helps.