

This may happen in either the entry point where 110V AC supply enters the RV converter or in the 12V DC breaker box.Īt the entry point, the voltage should be between 108 and 130 volts. The voltage range is abnormalĪnother sign that your RV converter went bad is abnormal voltage ranges. Faulty batteries won’t be able to maintain a constant charge, as we already mentioned. If you keep them connected, the bad batteries will draw charge from the good ones, and you will have a hard time spotting charging issues.Īfter the disconnected batteries sit for some time, check the charge in each of them using a multimeter. To check the condition of your batteries, you need to fully charge them and then disconnect them from each other. Unfortunately, if you don’t do occasional testing, you won’t spot a battery issue until they all go bad and lose their charge. Eventually, the good batteries would also go bad, and you would need to replace them all instead of just one. One bad battery that is unable to hold its charge would draw power from good batteries. You would want to spot issues with batteries as soon as possible. For the RV converter to work, its batteries need to maintain a constant charge to be able to supply current. In this case, the converter’s 12V batteries can no longer retain a constant charge.

Most commonly, this happens because the converter produces insufficient power to run its 12-volt direct current electrical system. This is the first sign that your converter is bad. Signs that your RV converter went bad The RV converter performs badly

