Can Hot-Skin Voltage Happen Without Being Plugged Into Power (Part 1)
Yes, you can get a shock from your RV even when it's not plugged into shore power!
Can overhead power lines create a hot-skin voltage on an RV?
Hey Mike
We stored our Itasca 30' Class C under high-voltage power lines for a few years. Over the course of time several electrical devices in the unit stopped working or were mostly worthless. I used a Proximity tester and found there was voltage all over the outside of the unit. And after lots of testing of the unit where I found I did not have a hot skin when on the road, I found the same situation existed in other units in the same lot at home. Finally,I don't remember any tingles, but it has been several years since we last parked there and something triggered all the testing. So it must have been a voltage transfer by proximity, I guess.  I eventually grounded the chassis when the unit was in storage, and that seemed to help. / Ted DeGroot
Dear Ted,
Oh yes, it’s certainly possible to feel a shock from your RV when it’s not plugged into shore power. And yes, as you guessed it has to do with the overhead power lines coupling magnetically into the metal of your RV chassis and body. I wrote about this effect back in 2017. Read on…
Can overhead power lines charge up an RV and cause a shock later?
Dear Mike,
I’ve been reading about hot-skin voltages on your No-Shock-Zone site for a while and have come up with a really strange one. We unplugged from a campground and drove several hundred miles before pulling into a storage facility. But when I got out and knelt on the wet ground to check my tire pressure and touched the trailer I got a pretty good shock, even though I’m not plugged into any power. Is it possible there was something wrong with the power outlet back at the campground that charged up my RV? What could possibly be causing this? —Harold
Dear Harold,
Taking a look at the picture of your storage facility gave me the answer to your conundrum. Overhead you’ll see a bunch of high-voltage power lines that are energized with upwards of 250,000 volts. And even though you’re not directly connected to them, the sheer size of your RV allows its chassis and skin to be magnetically coupled to the power lines, thereby creating up to a few thousand volts of hot-skin charge to develop.
But don’t worry. Unless you get really close to the power lines (several feet away or less) there will be such little current created that there’s no danger of electrocution.
So the answer is that no, there’s nothing that could have happened back at the original campground that would charge up your RV. Unbeknownst to everyone, every time you drive under a high-voltage power line your RV or other vehicle is indeed charged up to several thousand volts, albeit with a very low current that you’ll only feel if you’re standing on the damp ground and touching your RV.
Note that if your RV was plugged into a properly grounded power outlet, that would have drained away this harmless shock voltage.
END Part 1 - Read Part 2 tomorrow!
Let’s play safe out there…. Mike
Mike,
As I watch a construction crew bury a neighborhood’s power lines:
Can buried power lines have a similar effect?
What about the phenomena of vehicle static charge accumulation while driving?
Are the sources of a vehicle’s static charge accumulation the rolling tires, wind, something else, or a combination?
Under what circumstances should we consider grounding first before opening the fuel cap and inserting a fuel pump nozzle?