Matt42
TDR MEMBER
I may have damaged my 20 year old Norcold 2-way refrigerator. I was doing some wire-feed welding using one of the 10 gauge extension cords that I use as an RV extension cord.
For some dumb stupid reason, I managed to plug the welder into the same cord the trailer was plugged into. After less than five minutes of welding, the 20 amp breaker for the circuit tripped. At first, letting the breaker cool worked. Then I could reset it. (This is an actual in-the-panel GFI breaker.) I eventually got the welding project done once I discovered my cord selection mistake, and unplugged the trailer.
I thought at the time that the trailer and the 115 volt wire feed welder together might have exceeded 20 amps. But the trailer was only using the converter, and the welder consumed 15 amps at full output. I later discovered that when the refrigerator circuit is plugged in, it trips the shore power circuit breaker. It did not do this before my welding episode.
Could I have fried the circuit panel in the refrigerator? And if I did, could it be causing the problem? Thanks.
For some dumb stupid reason, I managed to plug the welder into the same cord the trailer was plugged into. After less than five minutes of welding, the 20 amp breaker for the circuit tripped. At first, letting the breaker cool worked. Then I could reset it. (This is an actual in-the-panel GFI breaker.) I eventually got the welding project done once I discovered my cord selection mistake, and unplugged the trailer.
I thought at the time that the trailer and the 115 volt wire feed welder together might have exceeded 20 amps. But the trailer was only using the converter, and the welder consumed 15 amps at full output. I later discovered that when the refrigerator circuit is plugged in, it trips the shore power circuit breaker. It did not do this before my welding episode.
Could I have fried the circuit panel in the refrigerator? And if I did, could it be causing the problem? Thanks.